Improving irrigation practices in container stock plant production of herbaceous plant cuttings

被引:0
|
作者
Fisher, P. R. [1 ]
Dickson, R. W. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Florida, Dept Environm Hort, POB 110670, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA
[2] Univ New Hampshire Cooperat Extens, G54 Spaulding Hall,38 Acad Way, Durham, NH 03824 USA
基金
美国食品与农业研究所;
关键词
dielectric; drip irrigation; evapotranspiration leaching; Pelargonium; soil moisture sensors; TRANSPIRATION;
D O I
10.17660/ActaHortic.2018.1205.111
中图分类号
S6 [园艺];
学科分类号
0902 ;
摘要
The majority of stock plants for producing cuttings of herbaceous ornamental plants for export to the US and Europe are located in Africa and Latin America. Plants are typically produced in bags or plastic containers, often with a locally-available volcanic rock or pumice substrate, and irrigation with a nutrient solution provided through drip emitters. Nutrient solution in many farms is not captured for treatment and recirculation in order to avoid the risk of disease transmission, and leaching fractions can be as high as 80%. The objective was to evaluate alternative approaches to measure water and nutrient use efficiency, and reduce leaching of nutrient solution. Dielectric soil moisture sensors (SMS) at the University of Florida (UF) were tested in both a 90% perlite/10% coconut coir substrate and a volcanic rock substrate over two years. The SMS were calibrated to monitor and automatically control moisture level in geranium (Pelargonium x hybrida) plants. Leaching fraction was 20 to 25% in the coir substrate, however, leaching rate increased when the highly porous volcanic substrate was used. An evapotranspiration model for geranium was also calibrated using vapor pressure deficit, light, and leaf area. Data on leaf area, climate, water, and nutrient use were collected from commercial geranium stock farms in East Africa. Leaching fraction (drained irrigation volume/applied irrigation volume) averaged 65 and 40% (397 or 111 mL container(-1) day(-1)) at the commercial locations, indicating high potential to improve irrigation efficiency. In commercial stock farm locations, we concluded that climate monitoring and moisture sensors were useful tools, but that other aspects including the substrate physical properties, irrigation uniformity and infrastructure, and staff training were also important to improve watering decisions.
引用
收藏
页码:871 / 877
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Drip irrigation scheduling for container grown trees based on plant water status
    J. A. Stoochnoff
    T. Graham
    M. A. Dixon
    Irrigation Science, 2018, 36 : 179 - 186
  • [42] Effect of shading Cattley guava stock plant (Psidium cattleyanum Sabine) on propagation by cuttings
    Voltolini, JA
    Fachinello, JC
    INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON MYRTACEAE, 1997, (452): : 59 - 62
  • [43] Improving Field Survival of Pine Seedlings and Cuttings: the Sappi Plant Quality Index©
    Ford, Craig
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL PLANT PROPAGATOR'S SOCIETY - 2013, 2014, 1055 : 11 - 16
  • [44] IN-PLANT PRODUCTION OF MILK CONTAINER CAPS .2.
    不详
    AMERICAN DAIRY REVIEW, 1981, 43 (03): : 40 - 40
  • [45] Mulching as a weed management tool in container plant production - review
    Khamare, Yuvraj
    Marble, S. Christopher
    FRONTIERS IN AGRONOMY, 2023, 5
  • [46] HARDWOOD CHIPS AS AN ALTERNATIVE MEDIUM FOR CONTAINER PLANT-PRODUCTION
    KENNA, SW
    WHITCOMB, CE
    HORTSCIENCE, 1985, 20 (05) : 867 - 869
  • [47] Application of Sensorweb™ Irrigation Control System in Plant Production
    Matthews, Jesse
    Chen, Ji-Jhong
    Sun, Youping
    HORTSCIENCE, 2021, 56 (09) : S18 - S18
  • [48] IN-PLANT PRODUCTION OF MILK CONTAINER CAPS .1.
    不详
    AMERICAN DAIRY REVIEW, 1981, 43 (02): : 28 - +
  • [49] High Efficiency Irrigation Systems for Containerized Plant Production
    Frangi, P.
    Amoroso, G.
    Piatti, R.
    Faoro, M.
    XXVIII INTERNATIONAL HORTICULTURAL CONGRESS ON SCIENCE AND HORTICULTURE FOR PEOPLE (IHC2010): INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON CLIMWATER 2010: HORTICULTURAL USE OF WATER IN A CHANGING CLIMATE, 2011, 922 : 157 - 161
  • [50] Amendment of fly ash to container substrates for ornamental plant production
    Chen, JJ
    Li, YC
    COAL COMBUSTION BYPRODUCTS AND ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES, 2006, : 177 - +