Having a healthy discussion with some folks about how plants uptake their nutrients, we seem to have hit a wall with our limited knowledge. Plants get their nutrients either through the organic cycle or in a bottle. Either way, nutrients(chemicals) are changed from their original form to a more plant available form to allow growth of the plant.
My question; Do plants care how those nutrients are changed(either via the organic cycle or man-made)? Pretty much, in theory, can synthetic nutrients supply a plant with the just as sufficient nutrients as the organic cycle? So far, we can't find a good modern study of this done on a side by side comparison. The studies we have found do suggest that synthetics can create just as nutrient dense/healthy food as organically grown food, however, this is not currently the norm.
At the moment we're not focused on environmental impact, pesticides, etc. of synthetic vs organic. Just want to know if there's a chemical difference(exactly what the plant receives after initial chemical breakdown) between the two different applications.
Any help would be greatly appreciated, I'm no chem student this is a subject over my head!
Thanks!