Abstract

Diffuse greenhouse glass can increase the production and growth of several crops, by scattering the incoming direct sunlight, which results in a better and more homogeneous light distribution in the crop canopy. Tomato and bell pepper growers in Belgium tend to install low-haze diffuse glass with a double anti-reflection (AR) coating. These glass types have a limited diffuse effect but have a higher light transmission compared to standard float glass. Therefore, tomato growers often increase stem density to maximize light interception. However, a denser crop could counteract the positive effects of diffuse glass on the vertical light distribution. In this study, the effect of low-haze diffuse glass with an AR coating was evaluated for different cropping densities for tomato and bell pepper taking into account the vertical light distribution throughout the crop canopy. Tomato plants with two stem densities (3.33 and 3.75 stems.m−2) and bell pepper plants (with only one stem density of 7.1 stems.m−2) were evaluated in a greenhouse compartment with diffuse and reference float glass during a full growing season. For tomato, a significant production increase of 7.5% was observed under diffuse glass during the second half of the growing season but only for the low stem density. The benefit of diffuse glass appears most relevant during sunny clear skies and on the sun-side-facing rows of the crop. For bell pepper, no significant production increases were noted between regular float or diffuse glass, because a bell pepper crop is typically covered with thermal screens to prevent sunburn on the fruits during sunny days. The vertical light distribution and the usefulness of AR-coated diffuse glass depends on the crop type and should be optimized accordingly by altering the stem density, leaf pruning strategy, row orientation, or crop variety.

Highlights

  • Sunlight is one of the most important environmental factors that influences plant growth and eventually yield in commercial greenhouses

  • We investigated the effect of low haze diffuse glass with a double AR coating on the yield of tomato and bell pepper in a semi-commercial greenhouse

  • Tomato cultivated in a more open canopy will produce more and larger fruit under low-haze diffuse glass combined with an AR coating, especially during sunny clear days

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Summary

Introduction

Sunlight is one of the most important environmental factors that influences plant growth and eventually yield in commercial greenhouses. The directional light distribution throughout the canopy plays an important role [1]. A crop perceives sunlight heterogeneously because it is mainly composed of direct light that arrives in a straight line, of which the intensity exponentially decreases throughout the canopy [2]. At a certain canopy depth, some leaves are heavily shaded and do not perceive direct light. Sunlight is composed of a small fraction of diffuse light that arises from the scattering of direct light by particles in the atmosphere [3]. This scattered or diffuse light results in a more uniform light distribution that

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