Nutrient Deficiency
Nutrient deficiency occurs when a crop does not receive adequate supply of essential elements — macronutrients (N, P, K, Ca, Mg, S) or micronutrients (Fe, Zn, Mn, Cu, B, Mo). Each deficiency has characteristic visual symptoms (yellowing, stunting, leaf curling, interveinal chlorosis) and can reduce yields 10–50% even when other inputs are optimal.
How Nutrient Deficiency Works
Deficiencies show up in predictable visual patterns that experienced farmers and AI vision systems can identify. Nitrogen deficiency: uniform yellowing starting from older (lower) leaves. Phosphorus: purple or reddish discoloration, stunted growth. Potassium: scorched leaf edges (marginal necrosis). Iron: interveinal yellowing on new (upper) leaves. Magnesium: interveinal chlorosis on older leaves.
Diagnosis proceeds in three steps. (1) Visual inspection — observe which leaves are affected (old vs new) and the pattern. Mobile nutrients (N, P, K, Mg) move from old to new growth, so deficiencies appear on old leaves first. Immobile nutrients (Ca, Fe, B, Mn) cannot relocate, so deficiencies appear on new growth first. (2) Soil testing — confirms availability in root zone. (3) Tissue testing — measures what the plant has actually absorbed; catches deficiencies that soil tests miss due to pH lockout.
Prevention is cheaper than correction. Regular soil testing (every 2–3 years), maintaining pH in the 6.0–7.0 range for most crops, and building soil organic matter all reduce deficiency incidence. Once visible symptoms appear, yield loss is typically already 5–15%; foliar feeding can partially rescue the crop but not fully recover. AI-powered vision systems like WiseYield can detect early nutrient stress 7–14 days before visible symptoms by analyzing subtle color and reflectance patterns.
Sources
- International Plant Nutrition Institute (IPNI). Visual plant nutrient deficiency guide.
- Mengel & Kirkby (2001). Principles of Plant Nutrition, 5th edition.