DemonTrich
Well-Known Member
you get +rep for giving GOOD advise, and helping people with CORRECT info.
wheres your rep at?
wheres your rep at?
so university studies dont give correct info in your opinion? is smoking cadmium good advice?you get +rep for giving GOOD advise, and helping people with CORRECT info.
wheres your rep at?
aren't you the one who said the link I posted from colorado st.U was wrong???so university studies dont give correct info in your opinion? is smoking cadmium good advice?
remember this??? that paper is from a universitydid that nice little write up teach you that salts are not up taken by plants? and what organic fertilizers contain mineral salts ? that article is hogwash it states only some inorganic ferts contain mineral salts. oh btw heres a list of all mineral salts and the nutrients they supply... can you find bat guano in there? do you know why you cant? because ammonium oxylate is NOT A MINERAL SALT!!!!
ftp://ftp.fao.org/codex/Circular_letters/CXcl2004/cl04_21e.pdf
now find worm castings... any mineral salts in there? what about molasses? rhubarb?
nice try mr sheen but you have your dicky doo wrapped up like a snickers and your squatting on an inverted barstool
this makes No sense, First it is damn near impossible to have a build up in 4 months, let alone, the plant to uptake enough to become toxic, then you can magically wash it out of the plant with some water?acetic acid(vinegar) mixed with water to ph 5.0 is effective at removing cadmium ions.This method injects an oxidant such as hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) into the contaminated aquifer. The contaminant is oxidized, primarily producing carbon dioxide and water. running electric current through the soil will immoblize cadmium ions. plain water with a low ppm will remove cadmium ions. flushing is necessary. you have all the proof. now youv said you were done with this thread over 5 times already. why do you keep comign back. go away you have accomplished nothing but make people question how you have so much rep in less than a year
Nice find, i didn't see anywhere in that paper that says you can remove any metals from the plant by flushing it with vinegar water. Did you?
Not in that paper, but the idea behind flushing with 5.0 pH water is to pull the heavy metals out of the soil and into the flushing solution. This is where having lime is important so as to be sure the soil gets buffered. But how much do you use to get all the cadmium out? And don't you risk lowering the soil's pH to a point where now the cadmium is freely available for root uptake?Nice find, i didn't see anywhere in that paper that says you can remove any metals from the plant by flushing it with vinegar water. Did you?
removing it from the soil with a low ph water or solution would be leeching. And in farming,leeching is probably needed. But it will not remove any from the plant and as you stated,would probably hurt the plant.Not in that paper, but the idea behind flushing with 5.0 pH water is to pull the heavy metals out of the soil and into the flushing solution. This is where having lime is important so as to be sure the soil gets buffered. But how much do you use to get all the cadmium out? And don't you risk lowering the soil's pH to a point where now the cadmium is freely available for root uptake?
Actually, then, the best solution for any supposed heavy metal build-up is to not allow your soils pH to ever get low enough where they will be available. A properly maintained soil will prevent heavy metals from getting into the plants.
nothing incorrect about your link. rather vague but it didnt touch on which fertilizers contain which amount of cadmium ... like this link does:aren't you the one who said the link I posted from colorado st.U was wrong???
actually the exact opposite is true. and heres the proof:What some people might fail to understand is that the reason he wants to use 5.0 pH water is that most heavy metals are not available for uptake in the soil until you get low pH. That's right, if you do have these supposed build-ups, your plant will not absorb them because they will not be available in properly pHed soil. So the idea is to put the cadmium into solution and leech it from the soil.
But your the one that said it was hogwash, ANd dyna gro isn't on your list, SO, guess i'm not smoking heavy metal,just rockin out to it.[video=youtube;L5NX3OVjzHg]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L5NX3OVjzHg[/video]nothing incorrect about your link. rather vague but it didnt touch on which fertilizers contain which amount of cadmium ... like this link does:
http://agr.wa.gov/pestfert/fertilizers/docs/rptFertHMWebCurrent.pdf
[video=youtube;D5P7gLs4wRg]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D5P7gLs4wRg[/video]But your the one that said it was hogwash, ANd dyna gro isn't on your list, SO, guess i'm not smoking heavy metal,just rockin out to it.
Neither of these apply to soil, the first link is everything in a flowing liquid solution, the second is for sludge. Please compare apples to apples if you want to prove anything worthwhile other than trying too hard to prove your self in this failing thread.actually the exact opposite is true. and heres the proof:
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF02371149
"Cadmium absorption and distribution in four plant species was studied using a system of flowing solution culture with cadmium added at 0.018 mmolm−3 and solution pH controlled at 5.0, 5.5, 6.0 or 7.0. With increasing pH from 5.0 to 7.0 the total cadmium content increaed by factors of 4 in cocksfoot, 8 in perennial ryegrass and 10 in lettuce and watercress. With the two grasses less than 15% of the total cadmium was transported to the shoots irrespective of solution pH. In contrast, 45 to 75% was transported to the shoots of lettuce and watercress, so increasing the risk of cadmium causing harm by entering the food chain through the edible part of the plant. The concentration in the dry matter of lettuce shoots increased from 1.9 to 26.2μg Cd g−1 with increasing pH from 5.0 to 7.0 whilst in watercress shoots the concentration increased from 14.3 to 118.5 μg g−1. It was concluded that the absorption of cadmium by the four species was markedly suppressed by acidification due to increased competition with hydrogen ion. "
in response to chucky, the whole idea is to make the cadmium bioavailability lower so that when you flush it will leach away. the study that brother posted was about how total metals are measured insoil . when they run low ph water through the soil it removes a percentage of it( gee i thought you said that wasnt possible?) and they measure that run off as a % of the total metal content.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18533538
"This paper studied the effects of applying citric acid, oxalic acid and acetic acid on the removal of heavy metals Cd, Pb, Cu and Zn from sewage sludge, and the form transformation and bioavailability of these heavy metals before and after the application of tested organic acids. The results showed that the removal rates of tested heavy metals except Cu increased with increasing acid concentration and action time. Among the tested organic acids, citric acid was more effective in removing heavy metals from sewage sludge, with the removal rate of 52.0% for Pb and 74.2% for Zn after a 7-hour action, and 76.0% for Pb and 92.5% for Zn after 24-hour action. The removal rates of the heavy metals by oxalic acid and acetic acid were relatively low. The Pb and Zn removed by citric acid were mainly in stable form, resulting in a relative increase of their unstable and exchangeable forms in the sludge. Though the removal rate of Cu and Cd was lower, their exchangeable forms still had somewhat increase after the action of tested organic acids."
i hope you can look at your own train wreck now. hint, its in your mirror