Effect of Salinity and Silicon Doses on Onion Post-Harvest Quality and Shelf Life

Author:

Venâncio Jefferson Bittencourt,Dias Nildo da Silva,Medeiros José Francismar de,Morais Patrícia Lígia Dantas deORCID,Nascimento Clístenes Williams Araújo do,Sousa Neto Osvaldo Nogueira de,Andrade Luciara Maria de,Pereira Kleane Targino OliveiraORCID,Peixoto Tayd Dayvison Custódio,Rocha Josinaldo Lopes Araújo,Ferreira Neto MiguelORCID,Sá Francisco Vanies da SilvaORCID

Abstract

Salt stress during pre-harvest limits the shelf life and post-harvest quality of produce; however, silicon nutrition can mitigate salt stress in plants. Thus, we evaluated the effects of salinity and fertilization with Si, in pre-harvest, on the morpho-physiological characteristics of onion bulbs during shelf life. The experiment was set up in randomized complete blocks, with treatments arranged in split-split plots. The plots had four levels of electrical conductivity of irrigation water (0.65, 1.7, 2.8, and 4.1 dS m−1). The subplots had five fertilization levels with Si (0, 41.6, 83.2, 124.8, and 166.4 kg ha−1). The sub-sub plots had four shelf times (0, 20, 40, and 60 days after harvest). Irrigation water salinity and shelf time reduced firmness and increased the mass loss of onion bulbs during shelf life. Salt stress reduced the contents of sugars and total soluble solids of onion bulbs during storage; however, Si supply improved the contents of these variables. Salinity, Si supply, and shelf time increased the concentrations of pyruvic and ascorbic acids in onion bulbs during shelf life. Si doses between 121.8 and 127.0 kg ha−1 attenuated the impacts caused by moderate salinity, increasing the synthesis of metabolites and prolonging the onion bulbs’ shelf life.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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