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Deficit irrigation based on drought tolerance and root signalling in potatoes and tomatoes
Authors:Christian R Jensen  Adriano Battilani  Georgios Psarras  Franciszek Janowiak  Zorica Jovanovic  Xuebin Qi  Sven-Erik Jacobsen
Institution:a University of Copenhagen, Faculty of Life Sciences, Department of Agriculture and Ecology, Højbakkegård Alle’ 13, DK-2630 Taastrup, Denmark
b Consorzio Bonifica CER, Italy
c Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Agroecology, Aarhus University, DK-8830 Tjele, Denmark
d NAGREF, Institute for Olive Tree and Subtropical Plants of Chania, Agrokipio, 73100 Chania, Greece
e Institute of Plant Physiology Polish Academy of Sciences, Niezapominajek 21, 30-239 Kraków, Poland
f Faculty of Agriculture, University of Belgrade, Nemanjina 6, 11080 Belgrade, Serbia
g China Agricultural University, College of Resource and Environment, #2 of West Road of Yuanmingyuan, H. Beijing 100094, China
h Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Farmland Irrigation Research Institute, 173 Jianshe Road, 453003 Xinxiang, China
Abstract:Agriculture is a big consumer of fresh water in competition with other sectors of the society. Within the EU-project SAFIR new water-saving irrigation strategies were developed based on pot, semi-field and field experiments with potatoes (Solanum tuberosum L.), fresh tomatoes (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) and processing tomatoes as model plants. From the pot and semi-field experiments an ABA production model was developed for potatoes to optimize the ABA signalling; this was obtained by modelling the optimal level of soil drying for ABA production before re-irrigation in a crop growth model. The field irrigation guidelines were developed under temperate (Denmark), Mediterranean (Greece, Italy) and continental (Serbia, China) climatic conditions during summer. The field investigations on processing tomatoes were undertaken only in the Po valley (North Italy) on fine, textured soil. The investigations from several studies showed that gradual soil drying imposed by deficit irrigation (DI) or partial root zone drying irrigation (PRD) induced hydraulic and chemical signals from the root system resulting in partial stomatal closure, an increase in photosynthetic water use efficiency, and a slight reduction in top vegetative growth. Further PRD increased N-mineralization significantly beyond that from DI, causing a stay-green effect late in the growing season. In field potato and tomato experiments the water-saving irrigation strategies DI and PRD were able to save about 20-30% of the water used in fully irrigated plants. PRD increased marketable yield in potatoes significantly by 15% due to improved tuber size distribution. PRD increased antioxidant content significantly by approximately 10% in both potatoes and fresh tomatoes. Under a high temperature regime, full irrigation (FI) should be undertaken, as was clear from field observations in tomatoes. For tomatoes full irrigation should be undertaken for cooling effects when the night/day average temperature >26.5 °C or when air temperature >40 °C to avoid flower-dropping. The temperature threshold for potatoes is not clear. From three-year field drip irrigation experiments we found that under the establishment phase, both potatoes and tomatoes should be fully irrigated; however, during the later phases deficit irrigation might be applied as outlined below without causing significant yield reduction:
Potatoes
°
After the end of tuber initiation, DI or PRD is applied at 70% of FI. During the last 14 days of the growth period, DI or PRD is applied at 50% of FI.
Fresh tomatoes
°
From the moment the 1st truce is developed, DI is applied at 85-80% of FI for two weeks. In the middle period, DI or PRD is applied at 70% of FI. During the last 14 days of the growth period, DI or PRD is applied at 50% of FI.
Processing tomatoes
°
From transplanting to fruit setting at 4th-5th cluster, the PRD and DI threshold for re-irrigation is when the plant-available soil water content (ASWC) equals 0.7 (soil water potential, Ψsoil = −90 kPa). During the late fruit development/ripening stage, 10% of red fruits, the threshold for re-irrigation for DI is when ASWC = 0.5 (Ψsoil = −185 kPa) and for PRD when ASWC (dry side) = 0.4 (Ψsoil, dry side = −270 kPa).
The findings during the SAFIR project might be used as a framework for implementing water-saving deficit irrigation under different local soil and climatic conditions.
Keywords:ABA  abscisic acid  ASWC  plant available soil water content  DI  deficit irrigation  DW  dry weight  DSS  decision support systems  FI  full irrigation  FSWE  fraction of soil water extraction by the drying roots  FW  fresh weight  IWUE  irrigation water use efficiency  NI plants  not irrigated plants  PRD  partial root zone drying irrigation  RDI  regulated deficit irrigation  SDI  subsurface drip irrigation  WUE  water use efficiency  X-ABA  xylem ABA concentration [X-ABA]  Ψsoil  soil water potential
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