Abstract

The concentrations of metabolites in plants are affected by sunlight integral and other factors such as plant size, water content, and time of day. Tissue composition was measured for various sizes of hydroponic lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) grown under seasonal variation in sunlight in a greenhouse and harvested in the morning or afternoon. Daily sunlight integral varied from 4 to 14 mol·m−2·day−1 photosynthetically active irradiance, and plant size varied from 2 to 260 g fresh weight (FW)/plant in this study. Much of the variation in tissue composition on a FW basis could be explained by the increase in dry matter content with irradiance normalized per unit area. Except for nitrate, metabolite concentrations on a FW basis increased with irradiance, and the changes resulting from irradiance were greater when harvested in the afternoon than in the morning. Nitrate concentration decreased with normalized irradiance, and the trend was the same whether measured in morning or afternoon. Malic acid increased with irradiance but not enough to counter the decrease in nitrate on a charge equivalence basis. Irradiance normalized per unit leaf area explained many effects of light and plant size on dry matter content and soluble metabolite concentrations. Lettuce for human consumption is best harvested in the afternoon after growth under high light, when it has the least nitrate and more of other nutrients.

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