Techniques in Hydroponics culture: What is best? Techniques in Hydroponics culture: What is best?Techniques in Hydroponics culture: What is best? onUnload="exitwindow()"

Pages

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Techniques in Hydroponics culture: What is best?

Hydroponic culture has been used widely and has been proven to make agriculture more efficient and effective, with lower overhead costs and high quality standards of produce.Hydroponics mainly has two different methods of culture. include solutions and culture media. Solution culture uses nutrient solution on the procedure. Three types of solution culture are static solution culture, continuous flow culture and aeroponics solutions. Culture media on the other hand, uses solid media in its culture. It can be gravel, soil and sand. Two main variations for each medium, sub irrigation and cultural solutions to irrigation.Static.

 In static culture, using container grown plants. This may be of glass, plastic containers, tubings or tanks. Conditions for culture is monitored as a solution of nutrients have been applied to plants. In this solution, culture may be aerated or not. In unaerated conditions, nutrient solution is maintained low enough so the roots can be exposed to air, to supply oxygen. However, aeration can also be provided through the use of an aquarium pump, airline tubing and valves. When the nutrient solution has been depleted to low levels, fresh water can be added. An example of a culture that uses the procedure on a hydroponic garden, this may be due to cultural space minimum flow requirement. Continuous solution. Have a continuous flow solution culture the nutrient solution flows past the roots. This is done in large containers, where a solution can be kept concentrated and potentially serve thousands of plants. A popular variation of this is the NFT

 NFT is Nutrient Film Technique where solution is maintained at the root level to enable the film open for aeration and nutrients are circulated through watertight gully channels called. The advantage of using the Nutrient Film Technique for the cultural other solution is to provide sufficient oxygen supply to plants, nutrients and water, where in some techniques, irregularity may occur. However, the downside of this technique may be in power outages and water clogging.The key to effective Nutrient Film Technique is having the right slope pattern for the culture. Practical ratio for this design is practiced on the slopes of 1:30 to 1:40. Higher yields of high-quality product obtained during the cropping period. Aeroponics.

  Aeroponics, as defined by wikipedia, is a system where roots are continuously or intermittently in an environment saturated with fine drops (mist or aerosol) of nutrient solution. This requires the plants to be hung in the air. The key to this technique is proper aeration. Aeroponics is widely used in studies of plant physiology at the Cultural laboratories.sMedium. Culture media as pre-defined in the above statement is a hydroponic culture by using gravel, sand or solid media. Subirrigation and top irrigation. Sub-irrigation or passive hydroponics is a method where plants grown in an inert porous medium that transports water and fertilizer to the roots by capillary action from a separate reservoir which is required, reducing labor and providing a constant supply of water to the roots, wikipedia. This simple technique is a container placed over the nutrient solution or irrigation mat.Top capillary is a method in which the nutrient solution is periodically applied to the crop. This is usually done manually but it may be automated through the use of water pump.s use of techniques for hydroponic systems can vary depending on the produce and the space available to implement it. What is profitable, in large part, a technique that is flexible and can be customized for each environment. all you can learn in Secrets to Successful Gardening Hydroponics. It's designed for The First Practical, Step-By-Step Guide to Successful Hydroponic Gardening