Yields of Tomatoes As Influenced By Application of Filter-Press Cake and Starter Solutions

1969 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-59
Author(s):  
H. Azzam ◽  
G. Samuels

An experiment using the Manalucie variety of tomato was established on a Vega Alta sandy clay soil at Río Piedras, P.R., with various combinations of filter-press cake, and starter solutions such as Folo-food, Growgreen, and 9-10-5, in addition to the regular commonly used fertilizer, 9-10-5. Filter-press cake increased the marketable yield by 6.76 tons. When filter-press cake was not applied the use of starter solutions failed to increase yields. A starter solution made from a 9-10-5 fertilizer was just as effective as the commercial starter solutions. The use of filter-press cake and/or starter solutions is recommended for tomato production in Puerto Rico.

1969 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 173-178
Author(s):  
J. A. Bonnet ◽  
M. A. Lugo-López ◽  
M. Rico-Ballester

Data have been presented here from a field experiment where bagasse, filter-press cake, and a commercial organic material were incorporated into a Santa Isabel clay soil under irrigation at the rates of 20 and 40 tons of dry material to the acre. The organic materials at the low level were hand-hoed into the topmost 6 inches of soil, while at the high level they were hoed to a 12-inch depth. Three crops: Corn, white beans, and sweetpotatoes, were grown consecutively in the sequence following the establishment of the treatment differentials. Bagasse, at both levels, depressed the yields of corn in a highly significant way. The use of filter-press cake at the rate of 40 tons to the acre outyielded bagasse at both rates, the commercial organic material at the high rate, and the check. No significant effects were measured on the bean and sweetpotato crops planted about 5 and 13 months, respectively, after establishing the treatment differentials. The growth of the latter was more uniform than that of corn. The results are discussed briefly along with other results obtained under different conditions in Puerto Rico.


1969 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 71-87
Author(s):  
Pablo Landrau, Jr. ◽  
George Samuels

The effects of major and minor fertilizer elements on yield and carotene and starch content of sweetpotatoes were investigated, and the following conclusions were drawn: 1. Excessive quantities of nitrogen decreased sweetpotato yields. The use of 82 pounds of N per acre was the highest rate needed in the four experiments. 2. The use of phosphorus fertilizers with rates of applications as high as 200 pounds of P2O5 per acre had no effect on yields. With the use of 300 pounds P2O5 per acre, a yield increase was obtained only on the Lares clay at Corozal. 3. No consistent increases in yields were obtained with increasing potassium additions to the soil. There was a yield response to the potassium applications on the Cataño loamy sand of the Loiza I experiment. There was no significant response to potassium on Lares clay at Corozal, on Cataño loamy sand at the Loiza II experiment, or on the Sabana Seca sandy clay loam at Sabana Seca. 4. The yields of marketable sweetpotatoes were increased by the use of potassium on Cataño loamy sand at the Loiza I experiment. 5. Filter-press cake used alone gave low yields on Cataño loamy sand. The use of filter-press cake plus fertilizer gave good results both on the heavy Lares clay and on the Cataño loamy sand. 6. The yields of sweetpotatoes were measurably affected by the use of lime in the acid Lares clay. The application of lime to raise the pH gave increased yields with increased soil pH. The Sabana Seca experiment showed yield increases from the use of calcium sulfate (gypsum). 7. No consistent yield increases were obtained from the use of magnesium oxide. 8. The use of boron gave significant yield increases in the Sabana Seca and Corozal experiments, but not in the Loiza experiment. 9. No yield increases occurred with the use of manganese and copper. 10. There was no effect on starch content attributable to any major- or minor-element treatment. 11. The use of nitrogenous fertilizers influenced the carotene content of the sweetpotatoes; where nitrogen applications produced yield increases there were also increases in the carotene content. 12. Increases in carotene content were obtained with phosphorus only when the yields were significantly increased by addition of phosphorus. 13. No significant effect on carotene content was noted for potassium, except for a decrease in one experiment on a Cataño loamy sand. 14. The carotene content of sweetpotatoes was measurably affected by the use of calcium carbonate on acid soils (pH 4.5). Increases in pH were accompanied by increases in carotene content. In most cases where yields were increased by liming, the carotene content increased appreciably. 15. No responses were obtained from the use of boron, magnesium, copper, and manganese on the carotene content of sweetpotatoes. No effects were obtained on yields by use of these elements, except boron on a Sabana Seca sandy clay. 16. A recommendation is made for sweetpotatoes of 600 pounds of a 8-6-16 formula per acre. 17. The yields of sweetpotatoes compared favorably with yields for the leading sweetpotato-producing States of Louisiana and North Carolina. 18. Yields were increased by planting in the shorter days of winter as compared to the longer summer days. Carotene content, however, was increased with spring as compared to winter plantings.


1969 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 206-212
Author(s):  
E. Hernández-Medina ◽  
M. A. Lugo-López ◽  
H. R. Cibes-Viadé

Data from two field experiments located in typical pineapple growing areas in the northern and interior regions of Puerto Rico are reported here. Pineapple plants grown in soil to which filter-press cake was applied previous to planting developed vigorously and were of a dark-green color. Their leaves were wider and their stems and flower stalks thicker than those of pineapple plants given other treatments. At one location, Arecibo, pineapple plants grown in soil receiving at least 39 tons of filter-press cake to the acre, in addition to 1,500 pounds of a 12-6-10 fertilizer, produced yields as high and fruits as large as plants grown in soil receiving twice as much fertilizer but no filter-press cake. Omissions of nitrogen or filter-press cake resulted in reduced yields. The possibility of using filter-press cake more extensively in pineapple fields in the Arecibo and related areas, in conjunction with smaller doses of fertilizers than are generally used, deserve careful consideration from the growers. At the second location, Corozal, 3,000 pounds of fertilizer in addition to 32 tons of filter-press cake to the acre proved to be necessary for maximum yields. Omissions of both potash and nitrogen are detrimental to pineapple production.


1969 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 99-104
Author(s):  
Arturo Riollano

Filter press cake, a refuse from sugar mills in Puerto Rico can be used advantageously for fertilizing tomatoes and cucumbers grown in the soil type Coto Clay No. 20. When applied at the rate of 12 tons per acre plus 1,000 pounds of fertilizer 8-10-15 it caused a significant increase in yield of marketable tomatoes amounting to 20.5 per cent over the treatment where chemical fertilizer 8-10-15 had been applied alone at the rate of 1,000 pounds per acre. When 20 tons filter press cake were applied alone and with different complete and incomplete chemical fertilizers, also significant increases in yield of cucumbers were observed. The yield with 20 tons of filter press cake alone was equivalent to the yield obtained with a complete fertilizer having 200 pounds NH3, 200 pounds P2O5and 200 pounds K2O.  Results seem to indicate that the most profitable treatment would be probably 20 tons filter press cake plus 200 pounds NH3and 200 pound P2O5.


1969 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 237-243
Author(s):  
Lii-Jang Liu ◽  
A. Rodríguez-Marcano

The optimum filter press cake extract mixture content for mycelial growth of the various isolates of Thielaviopsis paradoxa from sugarcane and pineapple was found to be 19 percent. Pathogenicity of T. paradoxa to sugarcane variety P.R. 980 was favored by high proportions of filter press cake. The rate of infection of sugarcane by this fungus increased with an increase of the percentage of filter press cake. The optimum concentration of sodium chloride for mycelial growth in a water agar medium was between 0.3 and 0.6 percent. The rate of infection of sugarcane seedpieces by T. paradoxa (dark strain) was lower with a higher sodium chloride content of the sand when inoculated at temperatures of 22° to 25° C.


1969 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 110-117
Author(s):  
M. A. Lugo-López ◽  
P. Landrau, Jr.

Data are presented to show the relative economic inefficiency of garbage compost when compared with inorganic fertilizers and filter-press cake. The content of potash and phosphoric acid is higher in the garbage compost than in the filter-press cake, but the former is slightly lower in organic matter. They both have about the same nitrogen level. In a greenhouse experiment it was found that additions of garbage compost and filter-press cake increased sorghum yields in the absence of inorganic fertilizers. However, when nitrogen, phosphoric acid, and potash were applied at the rate of 100 pounds to the acre each the application of either compost or filter-press cake did not increase yields significantly. Under the conditions that prevail in Puerto Rico there is hardly any need for plants to process town wastes for fertilizer production. At current price levels, the cost of commercial garbage compost would be so high in relation to its fertilizer-element value, that it could not compete with commercial inorganic fertilizers. The product is so bulky that hauling and application costs would be too high under normal conditions. Furthermore, the organic-matter levels of Puerto Rican soils are not so low as to justify the use of such commercial composts. Under average farm conditions there are more practical means of raising soil organic-matter levels, if and when necessary.


1969 ◽  
Vol 63 (3) ◽  
pp. 386-389
Author(s):  
Saulo J. Rodríguez ◽  
Carlos J. Torres ◽  
Ramón Bosque-Lugo ◽  
Nelson Semidey-Laracuente

Several native materials were evaluated as bedding materials for the growth of Anthurium at two sites in Puerto Rico. The materials were compared to peat moss for the production of cut flowers. After more than 3 years of data statistically analyzed, the results showed that materials such as cane bagasse, coffee leaf mold, wood shavings, spent ground coffee, cured coffee pulp or coffee parchment, chicken manure, tree bark, and top soil + filter press cake were as effective as peat moss for production of Anthurium flowers.


Plant Disease ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 86 (2) ◽  
pp. 156-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. A. Abbasi ◽  
J. Al-Dahmani ◽  
F. Sahin ◽  
H. A. J. Hoitink ◽  
S. A. Miller

Field trials were conducted over 2 years to assess the effects of compost amendments on disease development in organic and conventional processing tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum L.) production systems. The incidence of anthracnose fruit rot was reduced in organic tomato plots amended with a high rate of composted cannery wastes compared with the incidence in nonamended control plots in 1998 when disease incidence was high. Marketable yield was increased by 33% in compost-amended organic plots. Plots amended with a high compost rate had more ripe fruit than the nonamended control. The incidence of anthracnose and of total disease on fruit was less on the cultivar OH 8245 than on Peto 696. Total fruit yield of OH 8245 but not Peto 696 in organic plots was increased by amendment with composted cannery wastes. In conventional tomato production, composted yard wastes increased disease severity on foliage both years but reduced bacterial spot incidence on fruit in 1997, when disease pressure was high. The incidence of anthracnose was not affected by composted yard wastes. Marketable and total fruit yields of Peto 696 were not increased in compost-amended conventional plots. The plant activator Actigard reduced foliar disease severity and the incidence of bacterial spot and anthracnose on fruit, while increasing yield of marketable fruit.


2002 ◽  
Vol 82 (4) ◽  
pp. 771-780 ◽  
Author(s):  
X. Hao ◽  
A. P. Papadopoulos

Two full spring season tomato crops (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. “Trust”) were grown in an open rockwool system with standard rockwool feeding formulae (O-R; conventional method), and in closed rockwool systems with standard rockwool (C-R) or Nutrient Film Technique (C-NFT) feeding formulae (modified in 1997) in 1996 and 1997 to examine the feasibility of a fully closed rockwool production system with appropriate feeding formulae. The closed rockwool system with optimized feeding formulae achieved high marketable yield, similar to that of the open rockwool system. There were no differences in early plant growth, plant biomass or biomass partitioning, and in total fruit yield, size and grades except for the closed rockwool system with the standard rockwool feeding formulae (C-R), which had lower yield than C-NFT in the last month of harvest in 1996. The photosynthesis of old foliage was higher and the root systems at the end of the experiments were rated healthier in plants grown in the closed (C-R and C-NFT) systems than in plants grown in the open (O-R) system. Over 30% of water and fertilizer was saved with the closed systems in comparison to the conventional open system. These results demonstrated that closed rockwool systems with optimized nutrient feedings are economically and environmentally sound alternative methods for greenhouse tomato production in Ontario. Key words: Lycopersicon esculentum, tomato, yield, recycling, rockwool, greenhouse


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