4.1 Article

Silicon dioxide nanofertilizers improve photosynthetic capacity of two Criollo cocoa clones (Theobroma cacao L.)

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL AGRICULTURE
Volume 57, Issue 2, Pages 85-102

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0014479721000065

Keywords

Cocoa; Fluorescence; Foliar fertilizer; Nanotechnology; Nutrients; SiO2; photosynthesis

Categories

Funding

  1. CDCH-UCV PGE [03-036-2018/1]
  2. Corporation for the Scientific and Technological Development (CODECYT)
  3. FONACIT [2019000026]
  4. Foundation Empresas Polar

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The research found that spraying with SiO2-NF had a positive impact on the growth of cocoa plants, increasing nutrient content and promoting growth. In both clones, SiO2-NF increased the rate of photosynthesis and electron transport, leading to improved photosynthetic processes and growth.
Studies on the effect of nanofertilizers (NF) in physiological performance of plants is scarce, especially that related to substances encapsulated into silicon dioxide (SiO2) nanoparticles in cocoa plants. The effect of foliar application of SiO2-NF on nutrient contents, gas exchange, photochemical activity, photosynthetic pigments, total soluble protein (TSP), photosynthetic nitrogen use efficiency (PNUE), and growth in seedlings of two cocoa clones (OC-61 and BR-05) in a greenhouse was assessed. Spraying with SiO2-NF increased net photosynthetic rate (A) by 16 and 60% and electron transport rate (J) by 52 and 162% in clones OC-61 and BR-05, respectively, without changes in photosynthetic pigment concentration in either clone. The SiO2-NF caused a decrease of 37 and 22% in stomatal conductance in OC-61 and BR-05, respectively; a similar trend was observed in transpiration rate, causing an increase of 42 and 100% in water use efficiency in OC-61 and BR-05, respectively. In both clones, diameter of graft increased on average 28% with SiO2-NF. Higher photosynthetic capacity was related to an increase in leaf N, P, and TSP. A significant reduction in PNUE (A/N ratio) was found in OC-61, whereas in BR-05 PNUE increased after spraying with SiO2-NF. Overall, spraying with SiO2-NF had a positive effect on photosynthetic processes in both cocoa clones, associated with an increase in nutrients content, which translated into improved growth. A differential physiological response to spraying with SiO2-NF between clones was also found, with BR-05 being the clone with a better physiological response during the establishment and development stages.

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