Potassium for the plant: water regime stabilizer
Potassium (K)
Potassium in plants averages 0.3% by weight, with almost all of it in ionic form. Part is found in cell sap, and part is in the structural elements of the cell (mainly in the protoplasm). Potassium ions have not been detected in the nucleus.
Potassium is found in fresh leaves, buds of herbaceous and woody plants, bark, and roots of plants.
It has long been established that potassium acts as a stabilizer of the water regime in plants. Potassium helps maintain tissue moisture, optimizes the absorption capacity of roots, and balances the rates of respiration and photosynthesis. As a result, potassium-supplied plants become resistant to excess and deficiency of moisture, as well as to elevated and lowered temperatures.
By improving the water regime, potassium reduces the harmful effects of soil salinization on the plant.
Signs of potassium deficiency in plants appear not only at critically low levels of the element in the nutrient medium but also under the influence of other factors: disruption of the ratio of mineral elements, excessive nitrogen supply, liming, reduced or increased soil moisture, etc.
• common viburnum Viburnum opulus L., Caprifoliaceae (fruits, ash content – 240–320 mg%);
• common rowan Sorbus aucuparia L., Rosaceae (fruits, ash content – 330–420 mg%);
• species of hawthorn Crataegus L., Rosaceae (fruits, ash content – 200–460 mg%);
• species of rosehip Rosa L., Rosaceae (fruits, ash content – 240–480 mg%).