Soil nutrients
Plant essential nutrients are required for profitable and sustainable agricultural production. An insufficient amount of any essential nutrient will lead to poor crop or pasture growth and limit production, reducing profit for growers. Similarly, because fertiliser prices represent the single largest farm input cost, overuse will reduce growers profits, and can lead to run-off and off-site impacts, such as leaching into waterways.
Western Australian soils are inherently infertile so many farmers have built up soil nutrition levels and have now adopted a replacement approach to fertiliser management. This approach needs to be carefully managed and the department recommends that growers undertake regular monitoring of soil and plant nutrient levels.
Articles
Filter by search
Filter by topic
- (-) Remove Wheat filter Wheat
- Grains (2) Apply Grains filter
- Crops (2) Apply Crops filter
- Production & postharvest (1) Apply Production & postharvest filter
- Plant nutrition (1) Apply Plant nutrition filter
- Pests, weeds & diseases (1) Apply Pests, weeds & diseases filter
- Pulses (1) Apply Pulses filter
- Soil constraints (1) Apply Soil constraints filter
- Weeds (1) Apply Weeds filter
- Soil management (1) Apply Soil management filter
- Pastures (1) Apply Pastures filter
- Soil acidity (1) Apply Soil acidity filter
- Lupins (1) Apply Lupins filter
- Crop diseases (1) Apply Crop diseases filter
- Canola (1) Apply Canola filter
- Barley (1) Apply Barley filter
- Crop weeds (1) Apply Crop weeds filter
- Diseases (1) Apply Diseases filter
- Oats (1) Apply Oats filter
- Grains research & development (1) Apply Grains research & development filter
- Fertiliser (1) Apply Fertiliser filter
- Pasture management (1) Apply Pasture management filter