Increasing Efficiency and Reducing Costs of Citrus Nutritional Programs

To maintain a viable citrus industry, Florida growers must consistently produce large, high quality, economic fruit crops from year to year. Efficiently producing maximum yields of high quality fruit is difficult without an understanding of soils and nutrient requirements of bearing citrus trees. M...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mongi Zekri, Thomas Obreza, Arnold Schumann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries 2005-04-01
Series:EDIS
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.flvc.org/edis/article/view/114605
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1823866105859407872
author Mongi Zekri
Thomas Obreza
Arnold Schumann
author_facet Mongi Zekri
Thomas Obreza
Arnold Schumann
author_sort Mongi Zekri
collection DOAJ
description To maintain a viable citrus industry, Florida growers must consistently produce large, high quality, economic fruit crops from year to year. Efficiently producing maximum yields of high quality fruit is difficult without an understanding of soils and nutrient requirements of bearing citrus trees. Most Florida citrus is grown on soils inherently low in fertility with low cation exchange capacity (CEC) and low water-holding capacity, thus they are unable to retain sufficient quantities of available plant nutrients against leaching by rainfall or excessive irrigation. This document is Fact Sheet SL222, a fact sheet of the Soil and Water Science Department, Florida Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida. Original publication date January 2005. SL222/SS442: Increasing Efficiency and Reducing Costs of Citrus Nutritional Programs (ufl.edu)
format Article
id doaj-art-227c565f107d4e819dda1c650086e3bb
institution Kabale University
issn 2576-0009
language English
publishDate 2005-04-01
publisher The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries
record_format Article
series EDIS
spelling doaj-art-227c565f107d4e819dda1c650086e3bb2025-02-08T06:25:57ZengThe University of Florida George A. Smathers LibrariesEDIS2576-00092005-04-0120053Increasing Efficiency and Reducing Costs of Citrus Nutritional ProgramsMongi Zekri0Thomas Obreza1Arnold Schumann2University of FloridaUniversity of FloridaUniversity of Florida To maintain a viable citrus industry, Florida growers must consistently produce large, high quality, economic fruit crops from year to year. Efficiently producing maximum yields of high quality fruit is difficult without an understanding of soils and nutrient requirements of bearing citrus trees. Most Florida citrus is grown on soils inherently low in fertility with low cation exchange capacity (CEC) and low water-holding capacity, thus they are unable to retain sufficient quantities of available plant nutrients against leaching by rainfall or excessive irrigation. This document is Fact Sheet SL222, a fact sheet of the Soil and Water Science Department, Florida Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida. Original publication date January 2005. SL222/SS442: Increasing Efficiency and Reducing Costs of Citrus Nutritional Programs (ufl.edu) https://journals.flvc.org/edis/article/view/114605SS442
spellingShingle Mongi Zekri
Thomas Obreza
Arnold Schumann
Increasing Efficiency and Reducing Costs of Citrus Nutritional Programs
EDIS
SS442
title Increasing Efficiency and Reducing Costs of Citrus Nutritional Programs
title_full Increasing Efficiency and Reducing Costs of Citrus Nutritional Programs
title_fullStr Increasing Efficiency and Reducing Costs of Citrus Nutritional Programs
title_full_unstemmed Increasing Efficiency and Reducing Costs of Citrus Nutritional Programs
title_short Increasing Efficiency and Reducing Costs of Citrus Nutritional Programs
title_sort increasing efficiency and reducing costs of citrus nutritional programs
topic SS442
url https://journals.flvc.org/edis/article/view/114605
work_keys_str_mv AT mongizekri increasingefficiencyandreducingcostsofcitrusnutritionalprograms
AT thomasobreza increasingefficiencyandreducingcostsofcitrusnutritionalprograms
AT arnoldschumann increasingefficiencyandreducingcostsofcitrusnutritionalprograms