ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Gas exchange and productivity of yellow passion fruit irrigated with saline water and fertilized with potassium and biofertilizer

Járisson Cavalcante Nunes    
Lourival Ferreira Cavalcante    
Walter Esfrain Pereira    
José Thyago Aires Souza    
Dácio Jerônimo de Almeida    
Denizard Oresca    
Pedro Dantas Fernandes    

Resumen

The salinity of irrigation water can affect the growth and development of most plants of commercial interest. Aiming to study these aspects in passion fruit culture, an experiment was performed to evaluate the effects of bovine biofertilizer and potassium fertilization on gas exchange and production of the passion fruit ?BRS Giant Yellow? irrigated with non-saline and saline water. The treatments were arranged in randomized blocks with sub-subdivided plots using the 2×(3×5) scheme, which refers to two levels of electrical conductivity of the irrigation water as the main plot (0.35 and 4.00 dS m-1) and the combination of three potassic fertilization practices (without fertilization, fertilized with conventional and slow release KCl) with five doses of bovine biofertilizer (0, 25, 50, 75 and 100% of dose of 15 L m-2) in the subplots, with three replicates and 12 plants per plot. The physiological variables and the productivity were evaluated in two harvests, and the data were submitted to statistical evaluation of samples repeated in time. The application of bovine biofertilizer and potassium in soil with a sandy texture irrigated with saline water did not inhibit the degenerative effect of the salts on the photosynthetic rates of the plants. The salinity of the irrigation water reduced stomatal conductance, transpiration and net photosynthesis of the plants, but in the second crop, the instantaneous water use efficiency was higher. Although the productivity decreased from the first to the second harvest, the biofertilizer associated with potassic fertilization increased the yield of the crop, which surpassed the average of Brazil, the Brazilian Northeast and the State of Paraiba, Brazil.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Waclaw Jarecki, Tomasz Lachowski and Dagmara Migut    
Legumes, due to their symbiosis with papillary bacteria, can receive nitrogen from the air. The remaining nutrients must be supplied in fertilisers, either soil or foliar. In the pot experiment, we recorded the responses of two soybean cultivars (Annushk... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
Milica Colovic, Anna Maria Stellacci, Nada Mzid, Martina Di Venosa, Mladen Todorovic, Vito Cantore and Rossella Albrizio    
This study analyzed the capability of aerial RGB (red-green-blue) and hyperspectral-derived vegetation indices to assess the response of sweet maize (Zea mays var. saccharata L.) to different water and nitrogen inputs. A field experiment was carried out ... ver más
Revista: Agronomy

 
Habtamu Chekol, Yimegnu Bezuayehu, Bikila Warkineh, Tesfaye Shimber, Agnieszka Mierek-Adamska, Grazyna B. Dabrowska and Asfaw Degu    
The coffee plant is highly susceptible to drought, and different genotypes exhibit varying degrees of tolerance to low soil moisture. The goal of this work was to explore the interrelation between seed traits and germination events, growth patterns, and ... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
Rita Biasi, Elena Brunori, Silvia Vanino, Alessandra Bernardini, Alessia Catalani, Roberta Farina, Antonio Bruno and Gabriele Chilosi    
Plant?soil biota represent a unique living system crucial for improving crops? adaptation to climate change. In vineyards, plant?soil relations are mediated by rootstock?scion interaction, with grafted vines being the main plant material employed in vine... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
Grace A. Adegoye, Omolayo J. Olorunwa, Firas A. Alsajri, Charles H. Walne, Chaturika Wijewandana, Swatantra R. Kethireddy, Krishna N. Reddy and K. Raja Reddy    
In humid climates, waterlogging from excessive rainfalls can be a major limiting factor for soybean production, particularly during the reproductive stage. However, there is a limited understanding of how soybean growth and physiology respond to waterlog... ver más
Revista: Agriculture