Trace Elements in Plants with Particular Reference to Pasture Species
- 1 December 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Outlook on Agriculture
- Vol. 4 (6) , 270-285
- https://doi.org/10.1177/003072706500400603
Abstract
The trace elements in pasture species must satisfy both the nutritional requirements of the plant and the needs of the grazing animal. The growing plant may suffer from deficiency or excess of any given element; absorption of one metal ion may disturb the entry of another; species differences in uptake and tolerance exist, and may vary with the season. On the balance of these factors the health of the animal depends.Keywords
This publication has 72 references indexed in Scilit:
- SOME CONSIDERATIONS ABOUT THE TOLERANCE OF VARIOUS PLANT SPECIES TO EXCESSIVE SUPPLIES OF BORONSoil Science, 1961
- Iodine as a micronutrient for plantsPlant and Soil, 1961
- Comparative chlorine requirements of different plant speciesPlant and Soil, 1957
- The role of lipids in baking. IV.—Some further properties of flour lipids and defatted floursJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1957
- The effects and interactions of molybdenum, lime and phosphate treatments on the yield and composition of white clover, grown on acid, molybdenum responsive soilsPlant and Soil, 1955
- Mangan, Kupfer und Kobalt in Pflanzen und Böden schleswig-holsteinischer WeidegebietePlant and Soil, 1955
- RELATION OF WATER-SOLUBLE BORON IN ILLINOIS SOILS TO BORON CONTENT OF ALFALFASoil Science, 1953
- Molybdenum nutrition of crop plantsPlant and Soil, 1952
- Molybdenum nutrition of crop plantsPlant and Soil, 1951
- EVIDENCE ON THE INDISPENSABLE NATURE OF ZINC AND BORON FOR HIGHER GREEN PLANTSPlant Physiology, 1926