Dr Forest
Organic VEG Fertiliser 4-4-4 | For vegetative growth by Dr Forest
Organic VEG Fertiliser 4-4-4 | For vegetative growth by Dr Forest
Couldn't load pickup availability
Organic veg fertiliser 4-4-4 — dry amendment for vigorous vegetative growth
Veg 4-4-4 is a multi-input dry amendment formulated for the vegetative stage of plant growth. It delivers balanced nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium alongside calcium, magnesium, silica, trace minerals, humic and fulvic acids, fermented biochar, and natural growth promoters from Scottish seaweed and diastatic malted barley. Sixteen individual ingredients — each selected for a specific agronomic function — are blended in small batches to provide steady, sustained nutrition without the salt accumulation or nutrient spikes of synthetic liquid feeds.
This is a living soil fertiliser. The nutrients are released through microbial breakdown, which means the soil biology does the work — converting organic matter into plant-available forms at the rate the plant demands. The result is thicker stems, tighter internodes, vigorous lateral branching, and deep green foliage without the stretched, soft growth that excess soluble nitrogen produces. Use it as a soil mix amendment, a top dress during the grow cycle, or worked into outdoor beds.
What Veg 4-4-4 is used for
- Soil mix amendment for indoor growing — mix into soil or coco-based substrate before planting to provide a full nutrient charge through the vegetative stage; 5 nitrogen sources deliver sustained release without spikes
- Top dressing during the veg stage — sprinkle on the soil surface and water in; microbial breakdown releases nutrients gradually over 2–4 weeks without burning roots or disturbing the root zone
- Living soil and no-till systems — feeds the soil food web directly; fermented biochar, humic acid, and seaweed stimulate the biology that makes nutrients available, building soil health cycle after cycle
- Vigorous vegetative growth — balanced 4-4-4 ratio promotes thick stems, tight internode spacing, strong lateral branching, and deep green foliage during the critical growth phase
- Soil recycling and re-amendment — re-charge depleted substrate between cycles with a top dress or full remix; organic inputs rebuild the microbial community and restore nutrient balance
- Outdoor beds, raised beds, and allotments — apply 100–300g per square metre every 4–6 weeks during the growing season; use the lower end for light feeders and established beds, the upper end for heavy feeders and new plantings
- Flavour and aroma development — microbial nutrient cycling produces secondary metabolites that enhance terpene and flavour compound production in the finished crop
- Autoflower and photoperiod compatible — use at the lower end of the dosage range for autoflowers; transition to Bloom 2-8-4 when plants enter the flowering stage
Organic dry amendment vs liquid synthetic feed
Dr Forest Veg 4-4-4 (Dry Amendment)
- 16 organic inputs — multiple sources per nutrient for even release
- Feeds through microbial breakdown — nutrients released at the rate plants demand
- Contains calcium, magnesium, silica, and 60+ trace minerals
- Builds soil biology and structure with every application
- No salt accumulation — soil improves over time, not degrades
- Reuse your substrate — top dress and grow again
- Enhances flavour and aroma through secondary metabolite production
Typical Liquid Synthetic Feed
- 2–3 mineral salt inputs — single source per nutrient, rapid depletion
- Instant availability — nutrient spikes followed by rapid run-off
- Usually zero calcium, limited or no trace minerals
- Does nothing for soil biology — bypasses the food web entirely
- Salt accumulation damages roots and kills beneficial microbes
- Substrate is spent after one cycle — dispose and replace
- Feeds the plant but not the soil — diminishing returns over time
Why Veg 4-4-4 costs more than our Premium range
If you are running separate veg and bloom fertilisers rather than one product all the way through, you are already growing for maximum results. We built Veg 4-4-4 for that mindset — and we loaded it with the expensive ingredients that drive results, which is why it costs more than our Premium range (Tomato, Rose & Flower, Fruit & Veg, Strawberry). Compared to those blends, Veg 4-4-4 contains 2.5× the humic acid and double the Scottish seaweed. Veg and Bloom also include diastatic malted barley — a powerful nutrient cycling activator that is not in any of our other fertilisers. Our Premium range is excellent — crop-tuned NPK ratios designed for a single product to carry the entire grow from planting to harvest. But if you are splitting stages, you expect the best at each stage, and that is exactly what Veg 4-4-4 delivers.
Every batch of Veg 4-4-4 is blended by hand in our Stockport unit using British ingredients where possible — including Scottish seaweed and Yorkshire polyhalite. No slaughterhouse waste. No synthetic chemistry. Organic ingredients throughout.
What's inside: 16 organic inputs, each with a purpose
Every ingredient in Veg 4-4-4 is selected for a specific agronomic function. This is not a two-input NPK blend padded with fillers — it is a multi-source formula where each component contributes either a primary nutrient, a secondary nutrient, a trace element profile, or a biological function. The result is a fertiliser that behaves more like a living soil amendment than a simple plant food.
Nitrogen Plant Extract
The primary nitrogen source — a British-produced concentrated plant extract delivering 12% nitrogen without ammonia or urea. Unlike synthetic nitrogen salts, this is a true organic nitrogen that feeds through microbial mineralisation, providing a steady, sustained release as soil biology breaks down the organic matrix. No ammonia volatilisation risk. No salt loading. No EC spikes.
Phosphorous Plant Meal
British-produced primary phosphorus source delivering 15% phosphorus and 9% calcium from heat-treated plant material. The phosphorus is citric acid soluble — meaning plant roots can make it available on demand through their own root exudates. When the plant needs phosphorus, it secretes organic acids into the rhizosphere that dissolve the meal and release P directly into the root zone. This is biology-driven nutrient delivery at its most efficient — no waste, no excess, no lock-out. Phosphorus is the central component of ATP, the energy molecule that drives root development, cell division, and reproductive growth.
Mealworm Frass
Insect frass is the castings of mealworm larvae — rich in nitrogen (3–4%), phosphorus, potassium, and chitin. Chitin triggers the plant's systemic defence response, upregulating chitinase enzymes that provide natural pest and pathogen resistance. Frass also introduces beneficial microbial communities to the root zone.
Alfalfa Meal
Contains triacontanol — a natural growth hormone that stimulates cell division and increases the rate of photosynthesis. Also provides nitrogen, potassium, and a suite of amino acids. Alfalfa breaks down relatively quickly, providing an early-release nitrogen boost while slower sources are still being mineralised.
Rapeseed Meal
A medium-speed nitrogen source from cold-pressed rapeseed. Provides nitrogen alongside small contributions of phosphorus and sulphur. The protein content feeds bacterial populations in the rhizosphere, accelerating the nutrient cycling that makes organic growing work.
Sulphate of Potash
The primary potassium source. Sulphate of potash (K₂SO₄) provides potassium and sulphur in a chloride-free, plant-available form. Potassium regulates water transport, enzyme activation, and stomatal function. Sulphur is essential for amino acid synthesis and terpene production — directly influencing aroma and flavour intensity.
British Polyhalite
A 260-million-year-old evaporite mineral mined from beneath the North Yorkshire Moors. Delivers four nutrients in a single granule: 14% potassium, 17% calcium, 6% magnesium, and 19% sulphur. All four are released gradually over 8–12 weeks as the mineral dissolves — providing a slow-release calcium and magnesium supply that most organic fertilisers lack entirely.
Micronised Rock Phosphate
Ultra-finely milled apatite mineral delivering 31% phosphorus and 46% calcium. Micronisation massively increases the surface area exposed to soil acids and microbial activity, accelerating phosphorus availability compared to coarse rock phosphate. Also contributes significant long-release calcium.
Basalt Rockdust
Volcanic basalt ground to a fine powder, containing over 60 trace elements including iron, manganese, zinc, copper, boron, molybdenum, cobalt, and selenium. Remineralises depleted soils, buffers pH, and provides the full trace element spectrum that intensive growing depletes. Also contributes silica, calcium, and magnesium.
Clay Minerals
High cation exchange capacity (CEC) clay minerals that act as nutrient banks in the soil. Clay particles hold positively charged nutrient ions — calcium, magnesium, potassium, ammonium — and release them gradually to plant roots via exchange reactions. Prevents nutrient leaching and buffers against pH swings, particularly important in container substrates.
Fermented Biochar
Biochar is pyrolysed carbon with an enormous internal surface area — up to 300 m² per gram — that provides permanent habitat for beneficial soil microorganisms. Fermentation pre-charges the biochar with microbial communities and nutrients, so it is biologically active from the moment it enters the soil. Research shows biochar increases potassium retention by 18–35% under leaching conditions (Lehmann et al., 2011).
Scottish Seaweed (Ascophyllum nodosum)
Cold-water harvested from the Scottish Atlantic coast. Contains cytokinins, auxins, gibberellins, alginic acid, laminarin, mannitol, and over 60 trace elements. Acts as a biostimulant — priming the plant's own growth and defence systems. Seaweed application has been shown to increase yield by an average of 15% across crops in peer-reviewed meta-analyses.
Diastatic Malted Barley
A powerful nutrient cycling activator exclusive to our Veg and Bloom fertilisers. Germinated barley containing active amylase and protease enzymes that break down starches and proteins in the soil into plant-available sugars and amino acids — accelerating the microbial nutrient cycling that makes organic growing work. Also contains natural auxins and gibberellins produced during germination. Not found in any of our other blends — this is one of the reasons Veg and Bloom cost more than our Premium range.
Humic & Fulvic Acid
Humic acid increases cation exchange capacity, improves soil structure, and stimulates root growth. Fulvic acid is a low-molecular-weight chelator that binds micronutrients into plant-available complexes and transports them across cell membranes. Research shows humic substances increase bacterial biomass by 30–60% and mycorrhizal colonisation by 25–40% (Nardi et al., 2009).
Silica Meal
Provides plant-available silicon — the structural nutrient that strengthens cell walls, increases stem rigidity, and improves resistance to physical stress. Silicon-fed plants produce thicker stems capable of supporting heavier canopies and are more resistant to heat stress, drought, and fungal penetration. Critical for indoor growing where structural support is limited.
Herbal Mixture
A proprietary blend of dried herbs that contributes trace compounds, plant-based growth factors, and additional microbial food sources. Acts as a diversifier — broadening the range of organic carbon forms available to soil biology and supporting a wider spectrum of beneficial microbial species in the rhizosphere.
How to use Veg 4-4-4: application rates, soil mix ratios & feeding guide
Veg 4-4-4 is a granular dry amendment. Sprinkle it on the soil surface as a top dress, or mix it into your substrate before planting. Water in and let the biology do the work. No pH pens, no EC meters, no mixing reservoirs. This is organic growing at its simplest.
Application rates
Soil mix — new substrate
Mix thoroughly into soil or coco-based substrate before transplanting. Use the lower end for light feeders and autoflowers, the upper end for heavy feeders and photoperiod plants in larger containers. For a standard 20-litre pot, that is 7–13 tablespoons. Allow 7–14 days for biology to activate before planting if possible. Use our measurement converter to switch between grams, ml, and tablespoons.
Top dressing — ongoing veg feed
Sprinkle evenly on the soil surface around the base of the plant. Water thoroughly to begin microbial breakdown. For a standard 20-litre pot, that is 3–7 tablespoons per top dress. Start at 2–3 ml per litre and increase to 4–5 ml for large, vigorous plants in heavy veg. Use our fertiliser calculator to work out exactly how much you need for your grow.
Outdoor beds and raised beds
Scatter evenly and work lightly into the top 5–10 cm of soil. Water deeply after application. Use 100–200g for light-to-moderate feeders and established beds. Use 200–300g for heavy feeders and new plantings where soil needs building. Outdoor beds hold nutrients longer than containers — the larger soil volume, deeper biology, and natural buffering capacity mean a 4–6 week cycle delivers steady nutrition without the accumulation risk of more frequent applications.
Re-amending used substrate
After harvest, remove old root mass and break up the substrate. Mix in fresh Veg 4-4-4 at the standard soil mix rate. Add a handful of fresh worm castings or compost if available. Water thoroughly and allow 10–14 days for microbial activity to re-establish before replanting.
Coco coir substrates
Coco is biologically inert — unlike soil, it contains no microbial life to break down organic matter. We recommend adding worm castings or quality compost at 20–30% of the mix to introduce the biology that makes dry amendments work. Use pre-buffered coco or buffer with cal-mag solution before amending — unbuffered coco locks out calcium and magnesium through cation exchange. Use the upper end of the dosage range and top dress more frequently than in soil. Do not water to heavy runoff — unlike synthetic coco growing, heavy runoff flushes your dry amendments out of the root zone. Water thoroughly but stop before significant drainage.
Cal-mag supplementation — recommended with Veg and Bloom
We recommend using our Dr Forest Cal-Mag alongside Veg 4-4-4. We packed so many premium ingredients into this formula — biochar, humic acid, seaweed, malted barley — that there is limited room for the quantities of calcium and magnesium that fast-growing plants demand. Veg 4-4-4 contains calcium and magnesium from polyhalite, rock phosphate, and basalt, but supplementing with cal-mag ensures your plants never run short of these critical structural nutrients. This is especially important in coco substrates, soft water areas, and with heavy-feeding varieties.
Step-by-step: first grow cycle
- Prepare your substrate. Mix Veg 4-4-4 into your soil or coco at 5–10 ml per litre. Blend thoroughly — uneven distribution causes hot spots.
- Water the mix and wait. Moisten the amended substrate and leave for 7–14 days if time allows. This activates the biology and begins nutrient mineralisation before the plant arrives.
- Transplant and water in. Plant into the amended substrate and water deeply. The initial charge provides nutrition for the first 2–4 weeks depending on plant size and growth rate.
- Top dress when growth rate demands it. When you see the first signs of nutrient demand — lighter green lower leaves or slowing growth — top dress with 2–5 ml per litre and water in.
- Transition to Bloom. When the plant enters the flowering stage, switch to Dr Forest Bloom 2-8-4. For the first flower top dress, use a 50:50 mix of Veg and Bloom to smooth the transition.
Use dechlorinated water — chlorine and chloramine kill the beneficial soil microbes that break down organic matter and deliver nutrients to the plant. Leave tap water to stand for 24 hours, use a carbon filter, or add a dechlorinator. This single step makes the biggest difference to how well organic dry amendments perform.
Watering practice for dry amendments
Organic growing requires a different watering approach to synthetic feeds. Water thoroughly but not to heavy runoff — you want the entire root zone moist, but excessive drainage flushes dissolved nutrients and microbial by-products out of the substrate. In soil, water until you see the first drops of drainage and stop. In coco, this is even more critical — heavy runoff washes dry amendments straight through. Allow the top layer to dry slightly between waterings to maintain oxygen in the root zone and encourage healthy microbial activity.
What to watch for
Signs you need to feed more
Lower leaves lightening from dark green to lime green or yellow is the earliest sign of nitrogen depletion. Top dress at the higher end of the range (4–5 ml per litre) and increase frequency to every 2 weeks. If the plant is in a small pot relative to its size, consider transplanting into a larger container with freshly amended substrate.
Signs you are overfeeding
Very dark green leaves with downward curling tips indicate nitrogen excess. Reduce the amount per top dress, stretch the interval to every 3–4 weeks, or skip an application entirely. Organic dry amendments are forgiving — the biology self-regulates to a degree — but overloading the substrate will produce soft, stretched growth with poor structure.
For the first top dress after flipping to flower (or when autoflowers show pre-flowers), use half Veg 4-4-4 and half Bloom 2-8-4. This bridges the transition period when the plant still needs some nitrogen for stretch growth but is beginning to demand more phosphorus and potassium for flower development.
Use Dr Forest Cal-Mag throughout the grow to supplement calcium and magnesium — recommended with all Veg and Bloom feeds. Add Dr Forest Mineral Mix to your substrate for extra calcium, trace minerals, and clay CEC. Use Seaweed Powder as a fortnightly foliar or drench to boost growth hormones. Apply Humic Acid Granules as a soil conditioner to maximise nutrient retention. See our feeding schedule for the full programme.
Mix in a well-ventilated area. Wear a dust mask when handling dry powder. Wash hands after use. Keep out of reach of children and pets. Store sealed in a cool, dry place.
The science behind Veg 4-4-4: why a multi-input organic dry amendment outperforms liquid synthetic feeds
Why 4-4-4 is the correct ratio for vegetative growth
A balanced NPK ratio provides equal parts nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium — the three macronutrients most rapidly depleted during active vegetative growth. High-nitrogen formulas (such as 10-2-2 or 7-1-3) force rapid top growth at the expense of root development, structural integrity, and future flower production. A 4-4-4 ratio supports proportional development — strong roots, thick stems, and a robust vascular system that will support heavy yields during the reproductive phase.
Multi-source nitrogen: 5 inputs, 5 release speeds
Nitrogen in Veg 4-4-4 comes from five separate organic sources: nitrogen plant extract, mealworm frass, alfalfa meal, rapeseed meal, and seaweed. Each source has a different carbon-to-nitrogen ratio and a different mineralisation speed. Alfalfa breaks down within days to weeks. Frass and rapeseed meal release over weeks to months. The nitrogen plant extract provides the highest concentration at 12% N with a sustained background release. The combined effect is a staggered nitrogen supply curve — no spike, no crash, no deficiency window.
This is fundamentally different from a synthetic liquid feed where all nitrogen arrives as a single soluble salt. Soluble nitrogen spikes tissue concentrations, promotes soft, stretched growth, and flushes rapidly through the substrate — requiring constant reapplication and creating salt accumulation.
Phosphorus: 3 sources across the release spectrum
Phosphorous plant meal provides citric acid soluble phosphorus — 15% P that plant roots can unlock on demand through their own root exudates. When the plant needs phosphorus, it secretes organic acids that dissolve the meal directly in the rhizosphere. Micronised rock phosphate contributes slow-release phosphorus alongside significant calcium. Mealworm frass adds a biological phosphorus fraction that soil microbes mineralise over weeks. Three sources, three release mechanisms — ensuring phosphorus is available throughout the entire vegetative stage without over-supply or lock-out.
Potassium: chloride-free from 3 sources
Sulphate of potash delivers immediately available potassium with zero chloride — chloride toxicity is one of the most common causes of leaf-tip burn in container growing. Polyhalite adds slow-release potassium alongside calcium, magnesium, and sulphur. Basalt rockdust contributes trace potassium as part of its 60+ element mineral spectrum. No muriate of potash. No potassium chloride.
Calcium and magnesium: the missing nutrients
Most liquid synthetic feeds contain zero calcium. This is the single largest nutritional gap in conventional indoor feeding programmes. Calcium is the most abundant mineral in plant tissue, essential for cell wall integrity, root tip growth, and disease resistance. Magnesium is the central atom of chlorophyll and drives photosynthetic efficiency.
Veg 4-4-4 delivers calcium from three sources — polyhalite (17% Ca), micronised rock phosphate (46% Ca), and basalt rockdust. Magnesium comes from polyhalite (6% Mg) and basalt. These provide a baseline supply that most liquid feeds lack entirely. However, we packed so many premium biostimulant and nutrient-cycling ingredients into this formula that there is limited space for the full calcium and magnesium load that fast-growing plants demand. We recommend supplementing with Dr Forest Cal-Mag throughout the grow to ensure these critical structural nutrients are never the limiting factor.
Dual-speed release: fast organic + slow mineral
Fast-release organic fraction (days to weeks)
- Alfalfa meal — rapid nitrogen and triacontanol
- Mealworm frass — medium-speed NPK and chitin
- Rapeseed meal — medium-speed nitrogen and sulphur
- Sulphate of potash — immediate potassium
- Phosphorous plant meal — citric soluble P, released on demand by root exudates
- Diastatic malted barley — enzymes and growth hormones
Slow-release mineral fraction (weeks to months)
- Nitrogen plant extract — sustained background nitrogen (12% N)
- Micronised rock phosphate — very slow phosphorus + calcium
- Polyhalite — 8–12 week release of K, Ca, Mg, S
- Basalt rockdust — multi-year trace element release
- Clay minerals — CEC buffering and nutrient storage
Why organic dry amendments beat liquid synthetics for indoor growing
The shift from bottled liquid feeds to dry organic amendments is driven by measurable, repeatable outcomes — not ideology. Peer-reviewed research consistently shows that organic nutrient management produces healthier plants, better soil biology, enhanced secondary metabolite production, and more sustainable growing systems.
Microbial nutrient cycling produces secondary metabolites
When soil microbes mineralise organic matter, they produce enzymes, organic acids, amino acids, and volatile compounds as by-products. Many of these secondary metabolites are absorbed by plant roots and contribute directly to flavour, aroma, and terpene production in the finished crop. Synthetic feeds bypass this biology entirely — the nutrients are available, but the metabolic by-products are absent.
Organic inputs increase soil organic carbon and biology
Ferro et al. (2022) demonstrated that organic fertiliser management increases soil organic carbon by 12.9% compared to mineral-only inputs. Organic carbon is the foundation of soil health — it feeds microbial communities, improves water holding capacity, increases CEC, and creates the porous structure that roots need to explore the substrate efficiently.
Organic systems produce higher quality with maintained biodiversity
Xu et al. (2024) analysed 537 experiments across global crop systems and reported that organic fertilisation increased plant biomass by 56% while maintaining biodiversity. Inorganic fertilisation achieved 42% biomass increase but at the cost of soil biodiversity loss. In living soil systems, biodiversity is the mechanism of nutrient delivery.
Combined organic-mineral inputs maximise quality
Wang et al. (2023) synthesised 7,859 data pairs and concluded that combined organic-mineral fertilisation produces the highest crop quality outcomes of any fertiliser strategy. Veg 4-4-4 is precisely this — a blend of organic nitrogen sources (alfalfa, frass, rapeseed) with mineral nutrient carriers (polyhalite, rock phosphate, basalt, SOP).
Organic management reduces tissue nitrate accumulation
Cardarelli et al. (2023) reported that organic fertilisation reduces tissue nitrate concentrations by 27–50% compared to synthetic nitrogen sources. Lower tissue nitrate means cleaner, smoother-burning material with reduced harshness — a quality parameter that matters to growers producing high-value crops.
Enzyme activity and yield increase under organic management
Liu et al. (2021) measured urease activity +38.3%, β-glucosidase activity +122.4%, and yield increases of 15–20% under organic fertiliser management compared to unfertilised controls. These enzymes are the machinery of nutrient cycling — more enzyme activity means faster, more complete mineralisation of organic inputs.
Sugar and flavour compound upregulation
Li et al. (2024) found that all 21 starch and sucrose metabolism genes were upregulated under organic fertilisation. Higher sugar content translates directly to improved flavour, aroma, and overall crop quality. These are the biochemical pathways responsible for the quality difference between organically and synthetically grown produce.
Balanced NPK preserves actinobacterial diversity
Shen et al. (2024) showed that unbalanced fertilisation causes 23–31% loss of actinobacterial diversity in soil. Actinobacteria are critical for nutrient mineralisation, disease suppression, and the production of antifungal and antibacterial compounds in the rhizosphere. A balanced 4-4-4 ratio avoids the microbial disruption caused by high-N single-nutrient formulas.
Balanced 4-4-4 vs high-nitrogen formulas
Balanced 4-4-4 (Dr Forest Veg)
- Proportional vegetative growth — roots, stems, and foliage develop together
- Thick stems and tight internodes from adequate phosphorus and potassium
- Strong root system that supports heavy yields in flower
- Calcium and magnesium structurally included
- Smooth transition to flowering — no nitrogen excess to flush
- Preserves soil microbial diversity (Shen et al., 2024)
High-Nitrogen Formula (e.g. 10-2-2)
- Disproportionate top growth — stretched, soft, weak-stemmed
- Thin stems and wide internode spacing from nitrogen excess
- Underdeveloped root system limits flower-stage performance
- Usually zero calcium, minimal magnesium
- Excess nitrogen must be flushed before harvest
- 23–31% actinobacterial diversity loss from N imbalance
Scientific References
- Ferro, N.D. et al. (2022). Soil organic carbon dynamics under organic vs. mineral fertilization. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, 326, 107786.
- Xu, H. et al. (2024). Organic fertilization boosts plant biomass while maintaining biodiversity. Nature Communications, 15, 537 experiments meta-analysis.
- Wang, M. et al. (2023). Combined organic-mineral fertilization and crop quality — 7,859 data pairs meta-analysis. Field Crops Research.
- Cardarelli, M. et al. (2023). Organic vs. mineral fertilization: effects on nitrate accumulation in crops. Agronomy, 13.
- Liu, Y. et al. (2021). Organic fertilization increases soil enzyme activities and crop yield. Science of the Total Environment, 779, 146422.
- Li, J. et al. (2024). Organic fertilization upregulates starch and sucrose metabolism genes. Nature Scientific Reports, 14.
- Shen, W. et al. (2024). Unbalanced fertilization and actinobacterial diversity loss. Applied Soil Ecology.
- Nardi, S. et al. (2009). Humic substances and soil biology: chemical and biological activity. Soil Biology & Biochemistry, 41, 2164–2175.
- Lehmann, J. et al. (2011). Biochar effects on soil biota: a review. Soil Biology & Biochemistry, 43, 1812–1836.
- Rothamsted Research. Park Grass Experiment (1856–present). Long-term organic vs. mineral fertiliser field trials.
- Shukla, P.S. et al. (2019). Ascophyllum nodosum-based biostimulants: mechanisms and applications. Frontiers in Plant Science, 10, 655.
- Khan, W. et al. (2009). Seaweed extracts as biostimulants of plant growth and development. J. Plant Growth Regul., 28, 386–399.
- Goss, M.J. et al. (2013). Understanding soil nutrient availability. Soil Science Society of America Journal.
- Epstein, E. (1999). Silicon. Annual Review of Plant Physiology and Plant Molecular Biology, 50, 641–664.
- Luyckx, M. et al. (2017). Silicon and plants: current knowledge and technological perspectives. Frontiers in Plant Science, 8, 411.
Frequently asked questions about Veg 4-4-4
Share
