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Eight-Stamened Waterwort

Eight-Stamened Waterwort with Slow Growth: Pet-Safe Treatment

Elatine hydropiper

Eight-Stamened Waterwort is a plant that needs bright light and frequent watering. When showing slow growth, it may indicate issues related to its environment or care.

Is your Eight-Stamened Waterwort showing slow growth? Discover 3 possible causes and how to treat them.

🔍 Possible Causes (3)

Iron Deficiency
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Iron Deficiency

Iron deficiency, commonly known as iron chlorosis, is a nutrient deficiency disorder where plants cannot access sufficient iron from the soil. While iron is typically abundant in soil, various soil conditions can limit plant uptake, resulting in characteristic yellowing of leaves while veins remain green.

✓ Related symptoms:

  • Poor overall growth and stunted development

⚡ Quick Fixes:

Step 1

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Medium ⚠️

Nutrient Deficiency

Nutrient deficiency occurs when a plant cannot access one or more essential mineral elements in sufficient quantities for healthy growth. Plants require 17 essential nutrients: macronutrients (N, P, K, Ca, Mg, S) and micronutrients (Fe, Zn, Mn, Cu, B, Mo, Cl). Each plays a unique role in metabolism, structure, and reproduction. Deficiencies arise from depleted soils, incorrect pH blocking uptake, poor watering practices leaching nutrients, root damage, or imbalanced fertilization. Understanding whether a nutrient is mobile or immobile determines where symptoms first appear: mobile nutrients (N, P, K, Mg) show symptoms on older leaves first, while immobile nutrients (Ca, Fe, Zn, Cu, B) show symptoms on new growth first.

✓ Related symptoms:

  • Nitrogen (N): overall yellowing starting from older/lower leaves, progressing upward; slow stunted growth; pale lime-green foliage
  • Calcium (Ca): tip burn and distortion on youngest leaves and growing tips; blossom end rot in fruiting plants; stunted new growth
  • General: stunted overall growth, poor flowering and fruiting, leaf necrosis in advanced cases
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Soil pH Imbalance
Medium 🌡️

Soil pH Imbalance

Soil pH imbalance occurs when soil becomes too acidic (low pH < 6.0) or too alkaline (high pH > 7.5), preventing plants from absorbing essential nutrients. The ideal pH range for most plants is 6.5-7.5. When pH is outside this range, nutrients become chemically locked in the soil, leading to deficiency symptoms even when nutrients are present.

✓ Related symptoms:

  • Stunted or slow growth

⚡ Quick Fixes:

Step 1

View solution →

Other common symptoms

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