Abstract

To further development of a simplified fertigation system using controlled-release fertilizers (CRF), we investigated the effects of differing levels of fertilizers and plant density on leaf area index (LAI), fruit yields, and nutrient use in soilless tomato cultures with low node-order pinching and high plant density during spring-summer (SS), summer-fall (SF), and fall-winter (FW) seasons. Plants were treated with 1 of 3 levels of CRF in a closed system, or with liquid fertilizer (LF) with constant electrical conductivity (EC) in a drip-draining system. Two plant densities were examined for each fertilizer treatment. In CRF treatments, LAI at pinching increased linearly with increasing nutrient supply for all cropping seasons. In SS, both light interception by plant canopy at pinching and total marketable fruit yield increased linearly with increasing LAI up to 6 m2·m−2; the maximization point was not reached for any of the treatments. In FW, both light interception and yield were maximized at an LAI of approximately 4. These results suggest that maximizing the LAI in SS and FW to the saturation point for light interception is important for increasing yield. In SF, however, the yield maximized at an LAI of approximately 3, although the light interception linearly increased with increasing LAI, up to 4.5. According to our results, the optimal LAI at pinching may be 6 in SS, 3 in SF, and 4 in FW. In comparing LAI values with similar fruit yield, we found that nutrient supply was 32−46% lower with the CRF method than with LF. In conclusion, CRF application in a closed system enables growers to achieve a desirable LAI to maximize fruit yield with a regulated amount of nutrient supply per unit area. Further, the CRF method greatly reduced nutrient use without decreasing fruit yield at similar LAIs, as compared to the LF method.

Highlights

  • Development of a simplified, low-cost, and high-yield system in soilless agriculture is very important, for small-scale growers

  • We demonstrated that application of controlled-release fertilizer (CRF) to a water-circulating tank in a root-proof capillary wick irrigation system, a type of sub-irrigation method, resulted in the same quantity of fruit production with high nutrient-utilization efficiency through the suppression of excess nutrient uptake, as compared to liquid fertilizer (LF) application [7,8]

  • We investigated the effects of differing amounts of CRF application and plant density on leaf area index (LAI), fruit yield, and nutrient-use efficiency in a soilless tomato culture with a low node-order pinching system and high plant density in 3 different growing seasons

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Summary

Introduction

Development of a simplified, low-cost, and high-yield system in soilless agriculture is very important, for small-scale growers. We reported that application of CRF to a water circulating tank in a closed system greatly reduced nutrient supply without reducing fruit yield, compared to LF- and EC-based management used in an open water-draining system [9]. We investigated the effects of differing amounts of CRF application and plant density on LAI, fruit yield, and nutrient-use efficiency in a soilless tomato culture with a low node-order pinching system and high plant density in 3 different growing seasons.

Results
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