Comparing dry farming of tomatoes across varieties and soil management history
Alison R. Gill,
Coleman Rainey,
Yvonne Socolar
et al.
Abstract:Farmers faced with increasingly limited access to freshwater for irrigation are utilizing dry farming techniques to produce fruit, vegetable, and grain crops. Defined as crop production during a dry season using little or no irrigation, dry farming relies on water stored in the soil and requires specialized soil management, healthy soil biology, and careful selection of crop varieties. We investigated these three factors in a dry-farmed tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) field trial with three indeterminate varieti… Show more
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