4.7 Review

UV Lighting in Horticulture: A Sustainable Tool for Improving Production Quality and Food Safety

Journal

HORTICULTURAE
Volume 7, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/horticulturae7010009

Keywords

UV-A; UV-B; UV-C; ROS; LED; photomorphogenesis; phenols; postharvest

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Funding

  1. Rural Development Programme of the Apulia Region (Italy) 2014-2020 in the framework of the SOILLESS GO project [B97H20000990009]

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UV light can influence the physiological responses of plants, with factors like wavelength, intensity, and exposure having a great impact on plant growth and quality. Plants regulate their response to UV light through photoreceptors, and low doses of UV may stimulate biomass accumulation and synthesis of healthy compounds.
Ultraviolet (UV) is a component of solar radiation that can be divided into three types defined by waveband: UV-A (315-400 nm), UV-B (280-315 nm), and UV-C (<280 nm). UV light can influence the physiological responses of plants. Wavelength, intensity, and exposure have a great impact on plant growth and quality. Interaction between plants and UV light is regulated by photoreceptors such as UV Resistance Locus 8 (UVR8) that enables acclimation to UV-B stress. Although UV in high doses is known to damage quality and production parameters, some studies show that UV in low doses may stimulate biomass accumulation and the synthesis of healthy compounds that mainly absorb UV. UV exposure is known to induce variations in plant architecture, important in ornamental crops, increasing their economic value. Abiotic stress induced by UV exposure increases resistance to insects and pathogens, and reduce postharvest quality depletion. This review highlights the role that UV may play in plant growth, quality, photomorphogenesis, and abiotic/biotic stress resistance.

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