4.7 Article

Harvest and Post-Harvest Performance of Autumn-Winter Butterhead Lettuce as Affected by Nitrogen and Azoxystrobin Application

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy13010222

Keywords

strobilurin; Lactuca sativa L; var; capitata; PPOs; shelf-life; fresh-cut

Ask authors/readers for more resources

An autumn-winter trial in Southern Italy investigated the effects of nitrogen fertilizer rate and the application of azoxystrobin on butterhead lettuce. The study found that a rate of 50 kg ha(-1) of nitrogen fertilizer was suitable for autumn-winter lettuce, but did not guarantee color appearance of fresh leaves. Additionally, the application of azoxystrobin improved growth, yield, and quality of fresh leaves, as well as extended the shelf-life of shredded leaves.
An autumn-winter trial was carried out in Southern Italy in open-field conditions on butterhead lettuce to investigate the effect of the nitrogen (N) fertilizer rate (0, 50, and 100 kg ha(-1), N0, N50, N100) and the application of the azoxystrobin, sprayed twice in an earlier vs. a later application scheme, specifically at 65/85 or 65/100 days after transplantation. An untreated control was also included. The evaluation of the product quality was conducted on fresh and stored shredded leaves. The N50 was a suitable rate for autumn-winter butterhead lettuce, but it does not guarantee the color appearance of the fresh leaves (lowest h degrees, highest L*). Concerning post-harvest changes, the N50- and N100-product were less suitable for storage, accounting for higher decay of visual quality (h degrees) and physiological senescence (EL) indices. Irrespective of N rate and application time, azoxystrobin improved growth and yield (+16%), visual (lower L*, higher h degrees, and chlorophylls), and nutritional (higher carotenoids and antioxidant capacity) quality of the fresh leaves. The application of azoxystrobin improved the shelf-life of butterhead lettuce leaves, by keeping higher turgidity (RWC), lower color decay (CHLs, h degrees), and higher nutritional value (carotenoids), and by limiting the browning spreading in shredded leaves.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available