|
|
|
| Authors: | L.M. Brito, R. Pinto, I. Mourão, R. Rodrigues, J. Coutinho |
| Keywords: | Lactuca sativa, nitrogen mineralization, organic amendment, liming |
| DOI: | 10.17660/ActaHortic.2012.933.18 |
Abstract:
A field experiment with organic lettuce (Lactuca sativa) was arranged as a randomized block factorial design with increasing rates of composted horse manure (0, 20 and 40 t ha-1) combined with lime (0 and 8 t ha-1) to assess compost mineralization, lettuce growth and nutrient accumulation in lettuce shoots.
Commercial yield was significantly increased from 25.6 t ha-1 for the unfertilized control treatment to 35.8 t ha-1 attained with 40 t ha-1 of manure compost and 8 t ha-1 of lime.
Mean yield increase with lime for the overall compost treatments was 15% whereas with 20 and 40 t ha-1 compost was 18 and 26%, respectively.
Nitrogen content and N accumulation in lettuce significantly increased with the application of 40 t ha-1 compost but differences between 20 and 40 t ha-1 were not clear.
Lettuce uptake of P, K, Ca, Mg and Fe was not significantly different between experimental treatments except for occasional differences found for K. Apparent organic N use efficiency was highest for 20 t ha-1 of compost when lime was applied (18.3%) and increased also with lime application for treatments with 40 t ha-1 of compost.
This study shows the potential of horse manure compost combined with lime to increase organic lettuce yield and N uptake in low-fertility soils and for organic horticulture.
|
|
Download Adobe Acrobat Reader (free software to read PDF files) |
|