Figure 1. The optimal substrate pH for most greenhouse crops is between 5.4 and 6.4. Figure by Garrett Owen, MSU Extension.
Every year, Michigan State University Extension floriculture and nursery crops educators encounter situations where the pH of the substrate is either too high or too low for the crop being grown. With over 1,500 species of ornamental plants being grown by Michigan growers, it can be complicated to not only know the pH and electrical conductively (EC) requirements for each crop, but how to grow them effectively using similar media components.
Nutritional disorders can exhibit very different symptoms on different species of plants. For example, one sample of New Guinea impatiens (Figure 2) from last season had lower leaf chlorosis, marginal black spotting, and the dying of leaf tissue. These symptoms are often misdiagnosed and the growers subsequently do not correctly address the problem. In this case, the substrate pH of the New Guinea impatiens plants were 4.6 (recommended 6.0 to 6.5). The low pH caused the iron (Fe) and manganese (Mn) to be overly available to the plant causing a Fe and Mn toxicity. Without testing, this problem may have been misdiagnosed because we often see nutrient deficiencies related to high substrate pH often caused by the very high water alkalinity.
Figure 2. Symptoms of iron (Fe) and manganese (Mn) toxicity because of low substrate pH on New Guinea impatiens. Photos by Garrett Owen, MSU Extension.
There are a few options to correct low pH:
- Apply flowable lime at the rate of 1 to 2 quarts per 100 gallons of water. Be sure to rinse foliage.
- Apply a 1:15 solution of hydrated lime. To do this, mix 1 pound per 3 to 5 gallons of warm water and stir thoroughly.
- Apply potassium bicarbonate (KHCO3) at the rate of 2 pounds per 100 gallons of water. Be sure to rinse the foliage of the plant immediately, leach the substrate and do not over apply.
Source: MSU Extension (Heidi Lindberg and W. Garrett Owen)