Effect of electrical conductivity and transpiration on production of greenhouse tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum L.)
2001
A:PS
Formats
| Format | |
|---|---|
| BibTeX | |
| MARCXML | |
| TextMARC | |
| MARC | |
| DataCite | |
| DublinCore | |
| EndNote | |
| NLM | |
| RefWorks | |
| RIS | |
Title
Effect of electrical conductivity and transpiration on production of greenhouse tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum L.)
Publication Date
2001
Call Number
A:PS
Summary
We investigated the hypothesis that manipulating water out-flow of a plant through the shoot environment (potential transpiration, ET0) in a glasshouse could modulate the effect of salinity/osmotic potential in the root environment upon yield of tomatoes. In greenhouse experiments with tomato cv. Chaser, contrasting root-zone salinity treatments were combined with two climate treatments -- a reference (high transpiration, HET0) and a "depressed" transpiration (low transpiration, LET0). The salinity treatments, characterized by their electrical conductivity (EC) were 6.5, 8 and 9.5 dS m-1, were always coupled with a reference treatment of EC=2 dS m-1. In another experiment, concentrated nutrients (Nutrients) and nutrients with sodium chloride (NaCl) at the same EC of 9 dS m-1 were compared. Marketable fresh-yield production efficiency decreased by 5.1% for each dS m-1 in excess of 2 dS m-1. The number of harvested fruits was not affected; yield loss resulted from reduced fruit weight (3.8% per dS m-1) and an increased fraction of unmarketable harvest. At the LET0 treatments, yield loss was only 3.4% per dS m-1 in accordance with the reduction in fruit weight. Low transpiration did increase fruit fresh yield by 8% in both NaCl and Nutrients treatments at an EC=9 dS m-1. Neither EC nor ET0 affected individual fruit dry weight. Accordingly, fruit dry matter content was significantly higher at high EC than in the reference (4% per each EC unit in excess of 2 dS m-1) and responded to ET0 to a minor extent. Control of the shoot environment in a greenhouse to manipulate the fresh weight of the product may mitigate the effects of poor quality irrigation water without affecting quality.
Journal Citation
v.88(11):11-29, SCIENTIA HORTICULTURAE
Contact Information
Record Appears in