Publication | Open Access
Revisiting fertilisers and fertilisation strategies for improved nutrient uptake by plants
467
Citations
93
References
2015
Year
EngineeringBotanyLand UseInstantaneous UptakeAgricultural EconomicsKey FactorsSeed CoatingPlant-soil InteractionPlant-soil RelationshipSustainable AgriculturePlant NutritionPublic HealthSoil FertilitySoil Fertility ManagementBiogeochemistryImproved Nutrient UptakeAgricultureFertilisation StrategiesPlant PhysiologyNutrient Management
Fertilizers have boosted crop yields but cause environmental harm and yield gains are limited on poor soils, yet research and agronomic practices have not evolved sufficiently over the past five decades. The authors aim to guide fertilizer design by integrating plant physiology to optimize nutrient packaging, composition, and timing for better uptake. They suggest expanding nutrient delivery beyond roots to include above‑ground uptake, seed coating, and leveraging plant‑soil interactions and nanotechnology to enhance uptake. Progress in mitigating fertilizer’s negative impacts remains insufficient for sustainable agriculture in poor countries.
Meeting human needs within the ecological limits of our planet calls for continuous reflection on, and redesigning of, agricultural technologies and practices. Such technologies include fertilisers, the discovery and use of which have been one of the key factors for increasing crop yield, agricultural productivity and food security. Fertiliser use comes, however, at an environmental cost, and fertilisers have also not been a very economically effective production factor to lift many poor farmers out of poverty, especially in African countries where application on poor soils of unbalanced compositions of nutrients in fertilisers has shown limited impact on yield increase. Agronomic practices to apply existing mineral fertilisers, primarily containing N, P and K, at the right time, the right place, in the right amount, and of the right composition can improve the use efficiency of fertilisers. However, the overall progress to reduce the negative side effects is inadequate for the desired transformation toward sustainable agriculture in poor countries. Globally, there have been no fundamental reflections about the role and functioning of mineral fertilisers over the past 5 decades or more, and compared to other sectors, dismal investments have been made in mineral fertiliser research and development (R&D). In this paper, we reflect on current fertilisers and propose a more deliberate adoption of knowledge of plant physiological processes—including the diversity of mineral nutrient uptake mechanisms, their translocation and metabolism—as an entry point in identifying the physicochemical “packaging” of nutrients, their composition, amount and timing of application to meet plant physiological needs for improved instantaneous uptake. In addition to delivery through the root, we suggest that efforts be redoubled with several other uptake avenues, which as of now are at best haphazard, for the delivery of nutrients to the plant, including above ground parts and seed coating. Furthermore, ecological processes, including nutrient-specific interactions in plant and soil, plant-microorganism symbiosis, and nanotechnology, have to be exploited to enhance nutrient uptake. It is hoped that concerted R&D efforts will be pursued to achieve these strategies.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1