Demand for agricultural products with zero or reduced amounts of agrochemicals leads to increasingly healthy production alternatives. Thus, seedling formation and fruit yield of three cucumber cultivars were evaluated on different organic substrates in a protected environment. Marketer, Caipira and Verde Comprido cultivars were grown on five substrates: 100% cassava stems + 0% cattle manure; 75% cassava stems + 25% cattle manure; 50% cassava stems + 50% cattle manure; 25% cassava stems + 75% cattle manure and 0% cassava stems + 100% cattle manure. A completely randomized design in a 5 x 3 factorial scheme (5 substrates X 3 cultivars) was used, with six replications of four seedlings in the seedling formation phase and five replications of two plants in the fruit production phase. The seedlings were produced in trays with 72 cells, and fruit production was conducted in 13-liter pots. There was a little influence of the substrates on the emergence of cucumber cultivars: the substrates with 75 and 100% of cattle manure provided the best conditions for seedling formation, as well as the highest yield and the largest amount of fruits. On the best substrates, the cultivar Caipira had fruits with higher mass and larger average fruit diameter, but in smaller numbers.
Background
Oiti (Licania tomentosa[Benth.] Fritsch)
is an option for urban forestation and rural environments that require
shading by plants, so studying the plant environment to obtain quality
seedlings is essential. The present study aimed to evaluate oiti
seedlings in different protected environments with or without reflective
material on a cultivation bench.
Methods
The following protected environments were evaluated: an agricultural
greenhouse covered with a low-density polyethylene film and a
thermo-reflective screen with 42%/50% shading under the film; an
agricultural screenhouse with an aluminized screen with 35% shading; an
agricultural screenhouse with a black screen with 30% shading; and an
agricultural screenhouse with a black screen with 18% shading.
Production systems with and without photosynthetically active
radiation-reflecting material (aluminized screen,
Aluminet®) on the cultivation bench were
assessed in each protected environment.
Results
There was no interaction between the environmental factors; however,
the environments influenced height, stem diameter, root dry matter, and
total biometric relationships and growth rates. The reflective material
did not improve the quality of oiti seedlings. The ratio of shoot and
root dry matter was, on average, 71% for the shoots and 29% for the
roots. The photosynthetically active radiation received by oiti
seedlings ranged from 600 to 1,100 μmol
m−2s−1.
Conclusions
The greenhouse with 42%/50% shading screen under the film and the
black screen with 30% shading were the best environments for the
formation ofLicania tomentosaseedlings. The
reflective material on the cultivation bench did not result in better
quality oiti seedlings.
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