Different nursery growing systems and growth media improved germination and seedling growth of fever tea (Lippia javanica)
-
Published:2023-09-18
Issue:5
Volume:
Page:3-15
-
ISSN:2504-5695
-
Container-title:EUREKA: Life Sciences
-
language:
-
Short-container-title:Eureka: LS
Author:
Chagonda IgnatiusORCID, Chaibva PaulORCID, Ntini NigelORCID, Gwazane MunyaradziORCID, Ndau BlessingORCID, Ngezimana WonderORCID, Mtaita TauriraORCID, Mutetwa MosesORCID
Abstract
An experiment was set up in a Completely Randomized Design (CRD) to examine the influence of nursery growing methods and growth medium on fever, tea germination, and seedling development. Two nursery growth methods (Conventional-CON and Float tray system FTs) and six different growing medium (pine bark, peat moss, coco peat, vermiculite, sand, and cattle manure) were used. ANOVA was used to compare treatment means, and means were separated using the Least Significant Difference (LSD) at a 5 % significance level. The nursery growing method and growth material exhibited a strong interaction regarding the germination index, germination percentage, seedling height, leaf area, root length, density, and final crop stand. The float tray approach yielded the greatest germination index for peat moss and the lowest for cattle manure. In the float tray method, peat moss and coco peat had the highest germination percentages, whereas cattle manure had the lowest. Under the float tray technique, the tallest seedlings emerged in peat moss and the smallest in coco peat. Peat moss had the most leaf area in the float tray system, whereas coco peat had the least in the conventional technique. Peat moss in the float tray system had the highest root length density while coco peat in the conventional technique had the lowest. Peat moss in the float tray system had the highest final crop stand, whereas seedlings in the conventional and float tray systems had nothing. based on the findings, it is recommended that fever tea seedlings be grown on peat moss using the float tray method
Publisher
OU Scientific Route
Subject
General Engineering
Reference43 articles.
1. Marx, H. E., O’Leary, N., Yuan, Y., Lu‐Irving, P., Tank, D. C., Múlgura, M. E., Olmstead, R. G. (2010). A molecular phylogeny and classification of Verbenaceae. American Journal of Botany, 97 (10), 1647–1663. doi: https://doi.org/10.3732/ajb.1000144 2. Ofori, D. A., Asomaning, J. M., Peprah, T., Agyeman, V. K., Anjarwalla, P., Tchoundjeu, Z. et al. (2015). Addressing constraints in propagation of Allanblackia spp. through seed sectioning and air layering. Journal of Experimental Biology and Agricultural Sciences, 3 (1), 89–96. Available at: http://www.jebas.org/00300120022015/Ofori%20et%20al%20JEBAS.pdf 3. Wyk, B.-E., Gericke, N. (2000). People's plants: A guide to useful plants of Southern Africa. Briza publications. 4. Akoumianaki-Ioannidou, A., Rasouli, M., Podaropoulou, L., Karapanos, I., Bilalis, D. (2015). Effects of Cultivation System and Fertilization on Seedling Production of Ocimum basilicum L. and Mentha spicata L. Notulae Botanicae Horti Agrobotanici Cluj-Napoca, 43 (1), 131–137. doi: https://doi.org/10.15835/nbha4319851 5. Maroyi, A. (2017). Lippia javanica(Burm.f.) Spreng.: Traditional and Commercial Uses and Phytochemical and Pharmacological Significance in the African and Indian Subcontinent. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2017, 1–34. doi: https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/6746071
|
|