Abstract

Over recent years, some hopyards of northeast Portugal have presented poorly developed plants and reduced productivity. In this study, an attempt was made to improve the homogeneity of hop fields and restore their productivity by using plant biostimulants as foliar sprays. The experimental apparatus included four field trials carried out in four plots of different plant vigour, as evaluated by farmers over previous years (weak, fair, good and very good). The experiments were arranged as a factorial of foliar treatment (two plant biostimulants containing extracts of seaweed algae and an untreated control) and year (2017 and 2018). The plot and the year influenced greatly almost all the measured variables related to tissue nutrient concentration and crop performance. In the control plots, cone dry matter (DM) yield varied from 83.3 to 394.4 g plant−1 from the weak to the very good plots. In 2018, cone DM yield was significantly higher than in 2017. The use of foliar sprays influenced less the elemental composition of plant tissue than the plot or the year. The use of foliar sprays only increased significantly crop yield in the plot of weak plant vigour. The foliar treatments did not increase α- and β-acid concentration in the cones; in the control treatment of the most productive plot, the values were, respectively, 11.2 and 3.9%. Although seaweed extracts tend to help plants cope with several abiotic and biotic stresses, they showed to be effective in mitigating the stress that is affecting these plants, which probably is poor soil drainage caused by the flooding irrigation system, only under conditions of severe stress.

Highlights

  • A common way to meet crop nutritional requirements and improve crop productivity is through the application of conventional fertilizers to the soil

  • The restricted amounts of nutrients that can be supplied by foliar sprays make this strategy more attractive for the application of micronutrients, especially when the application to the soil is of little effect, such as in acidic or alkaline soils [2]

  • The European Union has recently recognized plant biostimulants as a distinct category within fertilizer products, in a regulation published on 25 June 2019 in the Official Journal of the European Union [Regulation (EU) 2019/1009]

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Summary

Introduction

A common way to meet crop nutritional requirements and improve crop productivity is through the application of conventional fertilizers to the soil. Several substances have been recognized as having a plant biostimulant effect, namely humic and fulvic acids, seaweed and plant extracts, chitosan and other biopolymers, various inorganic compounds, such as phosphite and silicon, and beneficial microorganisms [5,6,7]. Among these groups, seaweed extracts, in particular those obtained from Ascophyllum nodosum (L.), are the most studied and widespread in agriculture [8,9,10]

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