Effect of cultivar on measurements of nitrate concentration in petiole sap and leaf N content in greenhouse soil-grown cucumber, melon, and sweet pepper crops

Excessive N fertilizer applications in intensive vegetable production in soil is commonly associated with appreciable N losses causing negative environmental impact. Measuring petiole sap [NO3−‒N] and leaf N content (%) are simple and practical monitoring methods to assess crop N status for improvin...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rodríguez, Alejandra, Peña-Fleitas, María Teresa, Padilla Ruiz, Francisco Manuel, Gallardo Pino, Luisa, Thompson, Rodney
Format: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Language:English
Published: 2023
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10835/14791
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scienta.2023.112200
Description
Summary:Excessive N fertilizer applications in intensive vegetable production in soil is commonly associated with appreciable N losses causing negative environmental impact. Measuring petiole sap [NO3−‒N] and leaf N content (%) are simple and practical monitoring methods to assess crop N status for improving N fertilizer management. The effect of cultivar on petiole sap [NO3−‒N] and leaf N content was evaluated. One cucumber, two melon, and two sweet pepper crops were grown in different cropping periods, with three cultivars in each crop. Three N treatments, deficient (N1), sufficient (N2) and excessive (N3) N supply, were applied by combined fertigation with drip irrigation. For a given N supply, there were often significant differences between cultivars in petiole sap [NO3−‒N] and leaf N content in cucumber, the two melon crops and one pepper crop. This was, particularly so with the sufficient (N2) and excessive (N3) N supply. In the cucumber and two melon crops, there were consistent differences in petiole sap [NO3−‒N] between cultivars in two or three of the different N treatments. In some crops, very little petiole sap [NO3−‒N] was measured with deficient (N1) N supply. In the two pepper crops, the differences between cultivars were less clear than with cucumber and melon. In general, for the three species examined, petiole sap [NO3−‒N] was subject to more consistent and larger effects between cultivars, than was leaf N. Average differences between cultivars in petiole sap [NO3−‒N] of 200‒450 mg NO3−‒N L−1 were observed during periods of 4‒6 weeks in cucumber and melon. The differences between different cultivars of the same species in petiole sap [NO3−‒N] and leaf N content, when receiving the same N supply, has implications for the practical applications of these methods for monitoring crop N status.