2019
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy9100571
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Effect of Vegetal- and Seaweed Extract-Based Biostimulants on Agronomical and Leaf Quality Traits of Plastic Tunnel-Grown Baby Lettuce under Four Regimes of Nitrogen Fertilization

Abstract: Nitrogen (N) fertilizers play a crucial role in agriculture, representing a powerful tool for farmers for increasing yields throughout the seasons under both optimal and suboptimal conditions. At the same time, their synthetic/chemical nature could have several influences on ecosystems and human health. For this reason, there is an urgent need to find new and more sustainable means of production to increase plant productivity and optimize nitrogen use. An experiment was conducted in a plastic tunnel to assess … Show more

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Cited by 84 publications
(86 citation statements)
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References 56 publications
(100 reference statements)
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“…This was the case in the current study, whereby baby spinach and lamb's lettuce cultivated under N100% negatively modulated the synthesis and accumulation of antioxidant molecules such as total phenols and ascorbic acid along with low antioxidant activity. Similar trends were reported recently by Di Mola et al [42,43] on baby lettuce and rocket grown under optimal and supra-optimal N regimes.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…This was the case in the current study, whereby baby spinach and lamb's lettuce cultivated under N100% negatively modulated the synthesis and accumulation of antioxidant molecules such as total phenols and ascorbic acid along with low antioxidant activity. Similar trends were reported recently by Di Mola et al [42,43] on baby lettuce and rocket grown under optimal and supra-optimal N regimes.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…The plant-based biostimulant used in this test was Trainer ® , a legume-derived protein hydrolysate (containing free amino acids and signaling molecules such as small soluble peptides), for which previous researches have already demonstrated its ability to boost crops' resources use efficiency (RUE) [15,52]-especially N uptake and assimilation [39]-as well as productivity [6,32] and quality [53,54]. Our results highlighted the ability of LDPH to enhance yield of both baby spinach and lamb's lettuce (+24.6% and +13.5% for plant sprayed with Trainer ® compared to control plants, respectively), which is in line with Carillo et al's [35] findings on spinach, and Di Mola et al [42,43] on other two important leafy greens (lettuce and baby leaf rocket) cultivated under variable N regimes. The positive effects of the foliar application of LDPH, irrespective of the N fertilization treatments, were more pronounced in spinach than in lamb's lettuce, demonstrating a species-specific response [15,55], especially that the same commercial plant-based biostimulant was used.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…Lettuce green color is directly dependent upon chlorophyll synthesis in leaf tissue. Plant extract-biostimulant application affected lettuce greenness color (−a*) to the extent it affected chlorophyll content, as observed earlier in a broad span of leafy greens, such as spinach, lamb's lettuce, and baby lettuce [29,37].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 58%
“…Particularly, the higher marketable production that was observed in greenhouse lettuce plants that were grown under mulching films and treated with PE-biostimulant, was due to an increase in the leaf area and not to the number of leaves per plant. The increase in crop productivity and biometric parameters of lettuce plants grown under protected cultivation has been previously reported in several research studies testing the action of this tropical plant extract biostimulant on leafy and fruit vegetables, such as tomato, jute, wall rocket, and lettuce [18,28,29]. The biostimulant action of the commercial product Auxym ® on PE-treated lettuce plants could be associated to the presence of signaling molecules, such as carbohydrates, vitamins, but especially free amino acids and soluble peptides [14,18,30].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 64%