Different Nitrogen Sources Affect Biomass Partitioning and Quality of Potato Production in a Hydroponic System

Crop production systems should reduce nitrogen application costs and assure that the appropriate form of nitrogen is used. Thus, three potato cultivars in a hydroponic system were supplied with two different nitrogen sources to determine the effect on biomass accumulation and partitioning, and total...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of potato research 2013-04, Vol.90 (2), p.179-185
Hauptverfasser: Silva, J. G., França, M. G. C., Gomide, F. T. F., Magalhaes, J. R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Crop production systems should reduce nitrogen application costs and assure that the appropriate form of nitrogen is used. Thus, three potato cultivars in a hydroponic system were supplied with two different nitrogen sources to determine the effect on biomass accumulation and partitioning, and total plant nitrogen content. Cultivars Agata, Atlantic and Bintje received, on alternate days, nutritive solutions differing only in either calcium nitrate or urea. Urea stimulated biomass accumulation and total nitrogen in shoots. Moreover, urea reduced the ratios tuber:shoot and tuber:root, and increased the ratio shoot:root, indicating competition for biomass partitioning between shoots and tubers. Urea stimulated greater tuber volume in the Atlantic cultivar, and increased tuber protein content, which is undesirable for industry. These results suggested that salts containing nitrate could be more appropriate for hydroponic potato cultivation, since urea compromised tuber quality and biomass partitioning in all cultivars studied.
ISSN:1099-209X
1874-9380
DOI:10.1007/s12230-012-9297-5