Alleviation of Occurrence of Tipburn and Internal Rot in Tropical Chinese Cabbage

Tropical agriculture research series : proceedings of a symposium on tropical agriculture researches
ISSN 03889386
NII recode ID (NCID) AA00870529
Full text
In summer Chinese cabbage cultivation, both tipburn and internal rot are very serious problems which are generally considered to be caused by calcium deficiency associated with a variety of environmental, physiological or nutritional factors.
Research carried out at AVRDC indicates that ammonia (NH4-N) toxicity, rather than calcium deficiency is a more direct cause of tipburn in summer-grown Chinese cabbage. Ca deficiency is brought about by water stress due to root damage caused by NH4-N toxicity. The head formation stage is the most sensitive period to tipburn ; hence, the deleterious effect of NH4-N should be avoided at this stage.
Effective measures to reduce tipbum include the suppression of the initial plant growth by covering outer leaves with rice straw, use of split nitrogen application, and omission of heavy nitrogen fertilizer application at any growth stage. Attenuation of soil moisture fluctuations by compost application, water management and mulching are also effective measures for alleviating the incidence of tipburn and internal rot.
Internal rot was caused by limited Ca translocation into head leaves, vigorous growth rates and use of round-shaped heading cultivars. Measures to reduce internal rot include foliar spray of citric acid, covering outer leaves before head formation, split application of nitrogen fertilizer, selection of long-headed cultivars and acceleration of rooting by water management.
Date of issued
Creator Hideo Imai
Publisher Japan International Research Center for Agricultural Sciences
Volume 23
spage 203
epage 217
Language eng

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