AI Article Synopsis

  • The study compared traditional solarization to biosolarization using mature compost and tomato processing waste to see how these methods affected pest control and tomato plant growth in soil.
  • It measured soil oxygen depletion and volatile fatty acid accumulation in biosolarized soils, observing variations by soil depth and across two years of experiments.
  • Results indicated that when volatile fatty acids were present after biosolarization, tomato yield was similar to solarization; however, without these acids, biosolarized plants produced significantly more vegetation and fruit.

Article Abstract

Conventional solarization and biosolarization with mature compost and tomato processing residue amendments were compared with respect to generation of pesticidal conditions and tomato ( Solanum lycopersicum L.) plant growth in treated soils. Soil oxygen depletion was examined as a response that has previously not been measured across multiple depths during biosolarization. For biosolarized soil, volatile fatty acids were found to accumulate concurrent with oxygen depletion, and the magnitude of these changes varied by soil depth. Two consecutive years of experimentation showed varying dissipation of volatile fatty acids from biosolarized soils post-treatment. When residual volatile fatty acids were detected in the biosolarized soil, fruit yield did not significantly differ from plants grown in solarized soil. However, when there was no residual volatile fatty acids in the soil at the time of planting, plants grown in biosolarized soil showed a significantly greater vegetation amount, fruit quantity, and fruit ripening than those of plants grown in solarized soil.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jafc.8b00424DOI Listing

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