Abstract
In winter strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa Duch.) production, early-season nitrogen (N) fertilization greatly affects fruit earliness and yields, especially when pre-plant N is not applied. The objective of this study was to characterize the dose-responses of canopy growth, yield, and fruit quality to early-season N fertilization in ‘Florida Radiance’ and ‘Florida127’ strawberry. Field experiments were conducted in west-central Florida, United States. Treatments included four (0.56, 0.84, 1.12 and 1.40 kg ha−1 d−1) and five (0.22, 0.67, 1.12, 1.57, and 2.02 kg ha−1 d−1) early-season N rates in the first and second growing seasons, respectively. Increasing the early-season N rate increased early and total season yields by up to 62% to 65% and 56% to 58%, respectively, in the two cultivars. The total season yield had high positive correlations with leaf area and shoot DW. Model fitting analysis revealed cultivar-dependent dose-responses. Yield and berry size responses in ‘Florida Radiance’ were linear increases, whereas those in ‘Florida127’ were quadratic with peaks occurring at N rates of 1.21 or 1.57 kg ha−1 d−1. In ‘Florida Radiance’, soluble solids concentration showed a linear dose-response with a slope of –0.91 (0.91 °Brix decrease per 1 kg ha−1 d−1 N increase) during the early season. These results suggest that optimization of early-season N fertilization is an important production strategy to improve the profitability of winter strawberry production. Furthermore, fertilizer management that takes into account cultivar-dependent dose-responses can improve fertilizer use efficiency while minimizing fruit quality loss and environmental pollution risks.
Funder
Florida Strawberry Research and Education Foundation
Subject
Agronomy and Crop Science
Cited by
11 articles.
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