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Fertilization and Soil Nutrients Impact Differentially Cranberry Yield and Quality in Eastern Canada

Reza Jamaly, Sérge-Étienne Parent, Léon‐Étienne Parent

2021Horticulturae20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

High berry yield and quality of conventionally and organically grown cranberry stands require proper nutrient sources and dosage. Our objective was to model the response of cultivar “Stevens” to N, P, K, Mg, Cu, and B fertilization under conventional and organic farming systems. A 3-year trial was conducted on permanent plots at four production sites in Quebec, Canada. We analyzed yield predictors, marketable yield, and fruit quality in response to fertilization and soil properties. Cranberry responded primarily to nitrogen fertilization and, to a lesser extent, to potassium. Berry yield was closely related to the number of fruiting uprights (r = 0.92), berry counts per fruiting upright (r = 0.91), number of reproductive uprights (r = 0.83), and fruit set (r = 0.77). Nitrogen increased berry yield nonlinearly but decreased berry firmness, total anthocyanin content (TAcy), and total soluble solids content (°Brix) linearly, indicating a trade-off between berry yield and quality. Fertilizer dosage at a high-yield level ranged between 30 and 45 kg N ha−1 in both conventional and organic farming systems. Slow-release fertilizers delayed crop maturity and should thus be managed differently than ammonium sulfate. Berry weight increased with added K. Redundancy analysis showed a close correlation between marketable yield, berry quality indices, and soil tests, especially K and Ca, indicating the need for soil test calibration.

Topics & Concepts

BerryHuman fertilizationNutrientYield (engineering)AnthocyaninCultivarFertilizerBrixAgronomyHorticultureCrop yieldChemistryBiologyFood scienceSugarMetallurgyMaterials scienceOrganic chemistryBerry genetics and cultivation researchHorticultural and Viticultural ResearchPlant Physiology and Cultivation Studies
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