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  2. Ebb and flow hydroponics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebb_and_Flow_hydroponics

    The hydroponic solution alternately floods the system and is allowed to ebb away. A root ball and the growing medium required to grow a single plant. The medium will be washed and sanitized before being re-used. Under this system, water-tight growing containers are filled with a inert growing medium.

  3. Root rot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Root_rot

    Root rot is a condition in which anoxic conditions in the soil or potting media around the roots of a plant cause them to rot. This occurs due to excessive standing water around the roots. [ 1 ] It is found in both indoor and outdoor plants, although it is more common in indoor plants due to overwatering, heavy potting media, or containers with ...

  4. Ultrasonic hydroponic fogger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultrasonic_hydroponic_fogger

    In a hydroponic system ultrasonic hydroponic foggers [1] are used to create a fine mist, the individual particle size of which is typically of about 5 μm in diameter. These fine particles are capable of carrying nutrients from the standing water of a reservoir to plant roots. Benefits include humidification and exponentially improved root ...

  5. Controlled-environment agriculture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Controlled-environment...

    Controlled-environment agriculture (CEA) -- which includes indoor agriculture (IA) and vertical farming—is a technology-based approach toward food production. The aim of CEA is to provide protection from the outdoor elements and maintain optimal growing conditions throughout the development of the crop.

  6. Hydroponics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydroponics

    Because rotary hydroponic systems have a small size, they allow for more plant material to be grown per area of floor space than other traditional hydroponic systems. [56] Rotary hydroponic systems should be avoided in most circumstances, mainly because of their experimental nature and their high costs for finding, buying, operating, and ...

  7. Pyrrhoderma noxium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyrrhoderma_noxium

    P. noxium attacks the roots and lower trunk of trees, causing roots to rot and resulting in dieback (another term for root rot). It causes brown root rot disease, which afflicts over 200 plant species in tropical and subtropical regions. The pathogen can survive in the soil and on dead plant material for more than a decade, and the primary ...

  8. Rhizoctonia solani - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhizoctonia_solani

    Rhizoctonia solani sensu lato causes a wide range of commercially significant plant diseases. It is one of the fungi responsible for brown patch (a turfgrass disease), damping off (e.g. in soybean seedlings), [10] black scurf of potatoes, [11] bare patch of cereals, [12] root rot of sugar beet, [13] belly rot of cucumber, [14] banded leaf and sheath blight in maize, [15] sheath blight of rice ...

  9. Passive hydroponics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passive_hydroponics

    Semi-Hydroponics (Semi-Hydro or S/H) was the first passive hydroponic technique utilized for orchids, originating in the early 1990s, using Lightweight Expanded Clay Aggregate (LECA) as a medium in solid-bottomed containers, into which one or two, small-diameter holes were placed in the sidewall, setting the depth of the internal reservoir.