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Resumen de Modelling uptake of Na+ and Cl- by tomato in closed-cycle cultivation systems as influenced by irrigation water salinity

H. Varlagas, D. Savvas, G. Mouzakis, C. Liotsos, I. Karapanos, N. Sigrimis

  • The aim of the present investigation was to simulate the uptake concentrations (weights of ion per volume of water absorbed) of Na+ and Cl- in hydroponic tomato crops as a function of the NaCl concentration in the root zone. An empirical model was calibrated and validated, which can be incorporated into on-line operating decision support systems aimed at optimizing the nutrient supply and minimizing the discharge of drainage solution in tomato crops grown in closed-cycle hydroponic systems. Three experiments were conducted, of which one was carried out to calibrate the model using irrigation water with NaCl concentration ranging from 0 to 14.7 mol m-3 while the other two experiments were commissioned to validate the model within either a low (0.5�2 mol m-3) or a high (1.2�12 mol m-3) concentration range. The model could successfully predict the uptake concentration of Na+, but Cl- could not be simulated by this model at external Cl- concentrations lower than 10 mol m-3. The results indicate that Na+ is excluded actively and effectively by the tested tomato cultivar even at low external Na+ concentrations, while Cl- is readily taken up at low concentrations, particularly during the initial growing stages. Due to the efficient exclusion of Na+ by tomato, the Na+ concentration in the root environment increased rapidly to extremely high levels even when the Na+ concentration in the irrigation water was relatively low. These results indicate that tomato genotypes characterized by high salt-exclusion efficiency, require irrigation water with a very low NaCl concentration, if they are grown in closed hydroponic systems and the drainage water is not flushed periodically. To maintain Na+ at levels lower than 19 mol m-3 in the root zone of the tomato hybrid �Formula� in closed hydroponics, a maximum acceptable Na+ concentration of 0.53 mol m-3 was estimated for the irrigation water.


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