Hilgardia
Hilgardia
Hilgardia
University of California
Hilgardia

Chlorine in plant nutrition: Experiments with plants in nutrient solutions establish chlorine as a micronutrient essential to plant growth

Authors

Perry R. Stout
C. M. Johnson
T. C. Broyer

Authors Affiliations

Perry R. Stout is Professor of Soil Science, University of California, Berkeley; C. M. Johnson is Associate Chemist, University of California, Berkeley; T. C. Broyer is Plant Physiologist, University of California, Berkeley.

Publication Information

Hilgardia 10(9):10-10. DOI:10.3733/ca.v010n09p10. September 1956.

PDF of full article, Cite this article

Abstract

A severe nutritional deficiency disease occurred in tomato plants growing in experimental cultures after chlorine was removed from the nutrient solutions.

Stout P, Johnson C, Broyer T. 1956. Chlorine in plant nutrition: Experiments with plants in nutrient solutions establish chlorine as a micronutrient essential to plant growth. Hilgardia 10(9):10-10. DOI:10.3733/ca.v010n09p10

Also in this issue:

Lemon industry in California: Market interactions among fresh lemons and lemon products affect consumer purchase behavior, grower prices, and returns

Declining citrus root systems: Relationship of root systems to top growth and production investigated in citrus orchard rejuvenation program studies

Sodium in lemon tree collapse: Analyses show high sodium concentrations in the roots of collapsing trees are result of tree condition, not the cause

Nematode resistance in peaches: Resistance to two widespread species of root-knot nematode ranged from almost immunity to none in peach seedling study

Calico scale on walnuts: Problem of soft scales on walnut increasing but natural enemies still exert suppressing influence on calico scale

Fruit cooling by forced air: Portable unit designed to cool fruit in orchard at harvest reduces usually required 12-hour cooling period to 1 1/2 hours

Control of powder-post beetles: Complete kills of Lyctus beetles infesting hardwood floors achieved in 5–10 minute applications of infrared radiation

Gains of two types of lambs: Suffolk-Corriedale crosses gained faster and weighed more at weaning than Corriedale crosses during comparative study

Seedling growth on burned soil: Effect of prescribed burning on soil fertility reflected by the growth of pine seedlings in study of nutrient response

Drought-tolerating ornamentals: Natives and introductions from like climates require little water or maintenance and are adaptable to rural landscape

Ornamental flowering plants experimentally infected with curly top

Negative evidence on multiplication of curly-top virus in the beet leafhopper, Eutettix tenellus

Webmaster Email: sjosterman@ucanr.edu