I have to analyze a lot of peer reviewed research papers for my job; so I thought I would throw my two cents at this.
DavidCampen wrote,
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For each one of these 3 nitrogen sources you can find multiple papers that determine that particular nitrogen source to be the best for orchids.
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Everyone should remember that while mulitple studies may be present that report conflicting conclusions, it is best to delve into exactly what the study was testing and from where the study was sourced. Any study that is paid for by a vendor or supplier of fertilizer should immediately receive high scrutiny. Also, some studies are highly targeted in that they are really attempting to answer one very specific question under a very specific set of circumstances, and a lot of times the conclusions are stated absent of those experimental parameters.
I found this study to be very convincing. The study did a lot to test and ensure that nitrogen was being absorbed by the roots and was actually testing for the nitrogen rather than measuring growth amounts. For instance, it protected the leaves from coming into contact with the substrates and fertilizers (because it is well known that urea can be absorbed by the leaves.) And it tested the substrate after the plants were extracted for evidence that the urea had not hydrolyzed (hydrolyzed urea forms ammonium, which is already known to be absorbed by roots). They found that the sterilization was effective and that the urea was unchanged in the substrate.
What I liked about this study was that it tested three forms of nitrogen uptake: nitrate, urea, and ammonium against each other. To test if the nitrogen got into the plant, they used special isotopes of nitrogen, which they later tested for from the leaves.
While more nitrogen was found in the leaves from a urea source, it was not statistically more than ammonium. However, the amount of nitrogen uptake from ammonium and urea was 3 to 4 times higher than from nitrate.
The orchids used were phalaenopsis and the substate was sterilized agar. The one caveat was that very small traces of nickel might need to be present so that the plant can incorporate nitrogen from urea into its cells. The amount necessary is likely present naturally in most fertilizers.
This study looked at Catasetum fumbriatum and found that both ammonium and glutamine were the best absorbed, but it did not even look at urea, it was only comparing it to nitrate. Finally, the study notes that C. fumbriatum grows best natuarlly in rotting tree nodes. Clearly this study is very different than the phalaenopsis study above and it is looking to answer a different question: can C. fumbriatum absorb nitrogen from organic glutamine? It did not look at the absorption mechanism. But the study does show that different orchids may have evolved for different habits.
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If I look a bit more I will find one that determines nitrate to be the best.
Here is a fertilizer company that extolls the virtues of their nitrate only fertilizer which is carefully formulated to exclude any of that nasty old urea.
Growth Technology - Orchid Focus instructions
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