Abstract
A high atmospheric vapour pressure deficit (VPD) hinders calcium absorption in tomatoes (Solanum lycopersicum L.), which severely reduces tomato yield, crop water productivity (WPcrop), and quality. Although reducing the VPD is effective for increasing tomato yield and water productivity, regulating the VPD is costly. Therefore, this study aimed to explore the effects of VPD regulation (high VPD=2.22 kPa, low VPD=0.95 kPa) during different growth stages on tomato WPcrop, yield, and quality to identify a VPD management method that saves costs and enhances the above parameters. The results showed that the yield was significantly positively correlated with fruit calcium absorption. Decreasing the VPD during the fruit expansion stage and increasing it during the flowering stage significantly increased calcium accumulation in the fruits, thereby improving tomato WPcrop, yield, and quality. Additionally, a high VPD during the flowering stage increased stomatal conductance and mesophyll conductance, thereby increasing intercellular and chloroplast CO2 concentrations and enhancing plant photosynthetic capacity, and reduced the stem water potential, leaf water potential, and leaf relative water content, thereby increasing the water potential difference, leaf hydraulic conductance, and calcium absorption. By integrating game theory and the technique for order of preference by similarity to ideal solution method, a comprehensive analysis of tomato appearance, nutrients, and flavour quality revealed that growing plants under a high VPD during the seedling, flowering, and fruit ripening stages and a low VPD during the fruit expansion stage not only enhanced the comprehensive tomato quality value but also maximally reduced the humidification cost. Conclusively, controlling the environmental VPD at 2.22 kPa during the seedling, flowering, and fruit ripening stages and at 0.95 kPa during the fruit expansion stage can effectively increase tomato WPcrop, yield, and quality. This study provides a theoretical basis for the environmental regulation of high-quality, efficient, and water-conserving cultivation of greenhouse tomatoes.
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