Characterization of tomato growth and fruit quality under foliar ammonium sprays

This study was done to evaluate the effects of foliar application of ammonium sulfate on growth and fruit quality of tomato plants under hydroponic culture system. Over four months of tomato plant growth, plants were sprayed once per week with different concentrations of ammonium sulfate (0, 50, 100...

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Main Authors: Souri Mohammad Kazem, Dehnavard Sara
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2017-10-01
Series:Open Agriculture
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/opag-2017-0055
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spelling doaj-9021f32f6aa0479cb9205947771c410c2021-09-05T20:51:15ZengDe GruyterOpen Agriculture2391-95312017-10-012153153610.1515/opag-2017-0055opag-2017-0055Characterization of tomato growth and fruit quality under foliar ammonium spraysSouri Mohammad Kazem0Dehnavard Sara1Department of Horticultural Sciences, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, IranGraduated Msc in Horticultural Sciences, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, IranThis study was done to evaluate the effects of foliar application of ammonium sulfate on growth and fruit quality of tomato plants under hydroponic culture system. Over four months of tomato plant growth, plants were sprayed once per week with different concentrations of ammonium sulfate (0, 50, 100 and 200 mM), as well as with 50 mM every second day. Foliar application of ammonium sulfate led to reductions in many growth and quality parameters, and higher ammonium concentrations exerted greater reductions. Number of leaves, fresh weight of shoots, percentage of leaf dry weight and fruit yield were negatively associated with the treatment with ammonium sulfate. However, leaf nitrogen concentration, fruit diameter and fruit length increased significantly by the application of ammonium. Fruit quality factors were also affected by ammonium sulfate spray treatments. The maximum pH, titratable acidity and total soluble solids (TSS) were obtained from the lowest (50 mM) weekly application of ammonium sulfate. The results indicate that foliar application of ammonium in moderate concentrations could have beneficial effects on plant growth and quality of tomato fruit.https://doi.org/10.1515/opag-2017-0055environmentgrowthnitrogenplant nutritionvegetable crops
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Souri Mohammad Kazem
Dehnavard Sara
spellingShingle Souri Mohammad Kazem
Dehnavard Sara
Characterization of tomato growth and fruit quality under foliar ammonium sprays
Open Agriculture
environment
growth
nitrogen
plant nutrition
vegetable crops
author_facet Souri Mohammad Kazem
Dehnavard Sara
author_sort Souri Mohammad Kazem
title Characterization of tomato growth and fruit quality under foliar ammonium sprays
title_short Characterization of tomato growth and fruit quality under foliar ammonium sprays
title_full Characterization of tomato growth and fruit quality under foliar ammonium sprays
title_fullStr Characterization of tomato growth and fruit quality under foliar ammonium sprays
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of tomato growth and fruit quality under foliar ammonium sprays
title_sort characterization of tomato growth and fruit quality under foliar ammonium sprays
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Agriculture
issn 2391-9531
publishDate 2017-10-01
description This study was done to evaluate the effects of foliar application of ammonium sulfate on growth and fruit quality of tomato plants under hydroponic culture system. Over four months of tomato plant growth, plants were sprayed once per week with different concentrations of ammonium sulfate (0, 50, 100 and 200 mM), as well as with 50 mM every second day. Foliar application of ammonium sulfate led to reductions in many growth and quality parameters, and higher ammonium concentrations exerted greater reductions. Number of leaves, fresh weight of shoots, percentage of leaf dry weight and fruit yield were negatively associated with the treatment with ammonium sulfate. However, leaf nitrogen concentration, fruit diameter and fruit length increased significantly by the application of ammonium. Fruit quality factors were also affected by ammonium sulfate spray treatments. The maximum pH, titratable acidity and total soluble solids (TSS) were obtained from the lowest (50 mM) weekly application of ammonium sulfate. The results indicate that foliar application of ammonium in moderate concentrations could have beneficial effects on plant growth and quality of tomato fruit.
topic environment
growth
nitrogen
plant nutrition
vegetable crops
url https://doi.org/10.1515/opag-2017-0055
work_keys_str_mv AT sourimohammadkazem characterizationoftomatogrowthandfruitqualityunderfoliarammoniumsprays
AT dehnavardsara characterizationoftomatogrowthandfruitqualityunderfoliarammoniumsprays
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