Plant water uptake and water use efficiency of greenhouse tomato cultivars irrigated with saline water

被引:84
|
作者
Reina-Sánchez, A [1 ]
Romero-Aranda, R [1 ]
Cuartero, J [1 ]
机构
[1] CSIC, Estac Expt La Mavora, Malaga 29750, Spain
关键词
Lycopersicon esculentum; yield; fruit and plant dry weight; fruit quality; blossom end rot; Na+ uptake;
D O I
10.1016/j.agwat.2005.04.021
中图分类号
S3 [农学(农艺学)];
学科分类号
0901 ;
摘要
Effects of salinity on tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) fruit yield, plant water uptake and water use efficiency (WUE) have been quantified in experiments carried out under greenhouse and soil-less cultivation with four cultivars (Floradade, L1, L5 and L9) and four salinity levels (0, 25. 50. and 75 mM NaCl). Fruit represented 70% of plant fresh weight while leaves and stems represented 22 and 8%, respectively. Fruit were the most sensitive part of the plant, with the four cultivars showing similar significant fruit yield reduction, namely about 28 g/mM NaCl or 290 g/dS m(-1). Yield threshold varied from 0 to 3.4 dS m(-1), values lower than or close for the electrical conductivity (EC) of nutrient solutions used in commercial greenhouses. Yield reduction front threshold to upper salinities was about 8% of maximum yield per dS to 1 increase, Blossom end rot increased with salinity although the pattern of increase depended on the cultivar. Tomato fruit grown under saline conditions had higher soluble solids and acid content than those front the control (() mM) plants. Plants grown under the most saline conditions consumed, on average, 40% less water than control plants. The relationship between total plant water uptake and salinity was linear (negligible threshold) and salinity of the nutrient solution almost entirely explained the variations in plant water uptake (R-2 from 0.94 to 1); therefore, salinity of the irrigation water has to be taken into account when calculating tomato water requirements. However, significant differences in the negative slopes of the correlation lines indicate that decreases in plant water uptake. from 3.5 to 5%( per dS to m(-1). are cultivar-specific and cannot be generalised. Vegetative (stem and leaves) dry weight was a better indicator of tomato plant water uptake in saline condition, irrespective of cultivars than fruit yield or plant and fruit dry weight. Tomato plants in the control averaged a higher Will: than the most salinized plants when WUE was expressed as a function of fruit yield (25 and 13 g fruit L-1); however WUE was independent of salinity if expressed as a function of plant and fruit dry matter (approximately 3.0 g dry matter L-1). Tomato plants absorbed only a small proportion of the Na+ present in the nutrient solution (from 2.3 to 3.2%) but there were significant differences among the four cultivars which suggest that plant ability to select ions is a trait to be taken into account when selecting tomato genotypes for salt tolerance. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:54 / 66
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Efficiency of water use in irrigated tomato cultivars in the semi-arid regions
    da Silva, Alexsandro Oliveira
    Rodrigues de Almeida, Antonio Vanklane
    da Silva, Valsergio Barros
    Rabello, Janiquelle da Silva
    WATER RESOURCES AND IRRIGATION MANAGEMENT-WRIM, 2021, 10 (1-3): : 25 - 37
  • [2] GROWTH, YIELD AND WATER RELATIONS OF NORMAL FRUITED AND CHERRY TOMATO CULTIVARS IRRIGATED WITH SALINE WATER
    ALARCON, JJ
    BOLARIN, MC
    SANCHEZBLANCO, MJ
    TORRECILLAS, A
    JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE, 1994, 69 (02): : 283 - 288
  • [3] Growth, water use and salt uptake of four halophytes irrigated with highly saline water
    Miyamoto, S
    Glenn, EP
    Olsen, MW
    JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS, 1996, 32 (02) : 141 - 159
  • [4] Water and Nutrient Uptake Efficiency in Containerized Production of Fern Leaf Lavender Irrigated with Saline Water
    Garcia-Caparros, Pedro
    Llanderal, Alfonso
    Teresa Lao, Maria
    HORTTECHNOLOGY, 2016, 26 (06) : 742 - 747
  • [5] PLANT-WATER RELATIONS, GROWTH AND PRODUCTIVITY OF TOMATO IRRIGATED BY DIFFERENT METHODS WITH SALINE AND NON-SALINE WATER
    Malash, Nabeel M.
    Flowers, Timothy J.
    Ragab, Ragab
    IRRIGATION AND DRAINAGE, 2011, 60 (04) : 446 - 453
  • [6] WATER AND NUTRIENT USE EFFICIENCY IN COWPEA IRRIGATED WITH SALINE WATER AT DIFFERENT GROWTH STAGES
    de Lacerda, Claudivan F.
    Neves, Antonia L. R.
    Guimaraes, Francisco V. A.
    da Silva, Francisco L. B.
    Prisco, Jose T.
    Gheyi, Hans R.
    ENGENHARIA AGRICOLA, 2009, 29 (02): : 221 - 230
  • [7] Tomato plant-water uptake and plant-water relationships under saline growth conditions
    Romero-Aranda, R
    Soria, T
    Cuartero, J
    PLANT SCIENCE, 2001, 160 (02) : 265 - 272
  • [8] Effects of water and N-fertilizer supplies on the distribution and use efficiency of water and nitrogen of drip-irrigated tomato in greenhouse
    Zhang X.
    Wang H.
    Niu W.
    Nongye Gongcheng Xuebao/Transactions of the Chinese Society of Agricultural Engineering, 2020, 36 (09): : 106 - 115
  • [9] Evapotranspiration, Water Use Efficiency and Yield of Rainfed and Irrigated Tomato
    Agele, S. O.
    Iremiren, G. O.
    Ojeniyi, S. O.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURE AND BIOLOGY, 2011, 13 (04) : 469 - 476
  • [10] Growth ability of mango cultivars irrigated with saline water
    Morsy, MH
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON MANAGING GREENHOUSE CROPS IN SALINE ENVIRONMENT, 2003, (609): : 475 - 482