For saving space and soil, this method also has several
other benefits, including no soil-borne diseases, no
weeds to pull and no soil to till, run-of-the-mill side
benefits of soil-less gardening.

Hydroponic Gardening Article

Hydroponics is basically a Greek word which associates the method of growing plants using nutrient solutions, without soil is known as hydroponics. Hydro means water and pono means labor.

Gardening

Does thinking of food laced with toxic pesticides and synthetic compounds kill your appetite? That's what industrial food production has brought to our tables - food that is hampering our health and creating havoc with the environment.

Gardening by Greenhouse

There are some plants that need extra heat, and the climate is just not right. For these occasions, greenhouse gardening is a great way to get what you need.

Flower Bulbs

Hydroponic is the technique of growing flowers, fruits or vegetables in a soilless environment. The practice originated from the Aztecs where they used rafts covered in soil from the lake bottom to plant vegetables

The Environmental

Apparently, we can see how nature is treated these days. It is a sad thing to know that people do not pay attention so much anymore to the environmental problems.

Showing posts with label inception of hydroponics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inception of hydroponics. Show all posts

Hydroponics Historical Review

The development of hydroponics has not been rapid. Although the first use of CEA was the growing of off-season cucumbers under "transparent stone" (mica) for the Roman Emperor Tiberius during the 1st century, the technology is believed to have been used little, if at all, for the following 1500 years.

Greenhouses (experimental hydroponics) appeared in France and England during the 17th century; Woodward grew mint plants without soil in England in the year 1699. The basic laboratory techniques of nutrient solution culture were developed (independently) by Sachs and Knap in Germany about 1860 (Hoagland and Arnon, 1938).

In the United States, interest began to develop in the possible use of complete nutrient solutions for large-scale crop production about 1925. Greenhouse soils had to be replaced at frequent intervals or else be maintained in good condition from year to year by adding large quantities of commercial fertilizers. As a result of these difficulties, research workers in certain U.S. agricultural experiment stations turned to nutrient solution culture methods as a means of replacing the natural soil system with either an aerated nutrient solution or an artificial soil composed of chemically inert aggregates moistened with nutrient solutions (Withrow and Withrow, 1948).

Between 1925 and 1935, extensive development took place in modifying the methods of the plant physiologists to large-scale crop production. Workers at the New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station improved the sand culture method (Shive and Robbins, 1937). The water and sand culture methods were used for large-scale production by investigators at the California Agricultural Experiment Station (Hoagland and Arnon, 1938). Each of these two methods involved certain fundamental limitations for commercial crop production, which partially were overcome with the introduction of the subirrigation system initiated in 1934 at the New Jersey and Indiana Agricultural Experiment Stations (Withrow and Withrow, 1948). Gericke (1940) published a description of a quasi-commercial use of the liquid technique and apparently coined the word hydroponics in passing. The technology was used in a few limited applications on Pacific islands during World War II. After the war, Purdue Univ. popularized hydroponics (called nutriculture) in a classic series of extension service bulletins (Withrow and Withrow, 1948) describing the precise delivery of nutrient solution to plant roots in either liquid or aggregate systems. While there was commercial interest in the use of such systems, hydroponics or nutriculture was not widely accepted because of the high cost in construction of the concrete growing beds.

After a period of ~20 years, interest in hydroponics was renewed with the advent of plastics. Plastics were used not only in the glazing of greenhouses, but also in place of concrete in lining the growing beds. Plastics were also important in the introduction of drip irrigation. Numerous promotional schemes involving hydroponics became common with huge investments made in growing systems.

Greenhouse areas began to expand significantly in Europe and Asia during the 1950s and 1960s, and large hydroponic systems were developed in the deserts of California, Arizona, Abu Dhabi, and Iran about 1970 (Fontes, 1973; Jensen and Teran, 1971). In these desert locations, the advantages of the technology were augmented by the duration and interest of the solar radiation, which maximized photosynthetic production.

Unfortunately, escalating oil prices, starting in 1973, substantially increased the costs of CEA heating and cooling by one or two orders of magnitude. This, along with fewer chemicals registered for pest control, caused many bankruptcies and a decreasing interest in hydroponics, especially in the United States.

Since the inception of hydroponics, research to refine the methodology has continued. In the late 1960s researchers at the Glasshouse Crops Research Institute (GCRI), Littlehampton, England developed the nutrient film technique along with a number of subsequent refinements (Graves, 1983). This research gave rise to the hydroponic systems used today. Jensen and Collins (1985) published a complete review of hydroponics highlighting many new cultural systems developed in Europe and the United States.

Almost 20 years have passed since the last real commercial interest in hydroponics, but today there is renewed interest among growers establishing CEA/hydroponic systems. This is especially true in regions where there is concern about controlling pollution of ground water with nutrient wastes or soil sterilants. Today growers appear to be much more critical in regard to site selection, structures, the growing system, pest control, and markets.

from : University of Arizona

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