Development of Best Management Practices for Fertigation of Young Citrus Trees, 2002 Report

'Newhall' navel oranges on 'Carrizo' rootstock were planted in Mar. 1997 at the Citrus Agricultural Center. The objectives of this experiment were to i) determine the effects of N rate and fertigation frequency for microsprinkler-irrigated navel oranges on tree N status, and crop...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Thompson, Thomas L., White, Scott A., Walworth, James, Sower, Greg
Other Authors: Wright, Glenn
Language:en_US
Published: College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ) 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/223671
id ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-223671
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-2236712015-10-23T04:55:34Z Development of Best Management Practices for Fertigation of Young Citrus Trees, 2002 Report Thompson, Thomas L. White, Scott A. Walworth, James Sower, Greg Wright, Glenn Gibson, Rick Agriculture -- Arizona Citrus fruits -- Arizona Citrus -- Fertilization Citrus -- Irrigation 'Newhall' navel oranges on 'Carrizo' rootstock were planted in Mar. 1997 at the Citrus Agricultural Center. The objectives of this experiment were to i) determine the effects of N rate and fertigation frequency for microsprinkler-irrigated navel oranges on tree N status, and crop yield and quality; and ii) develop Best Management Practices which promote optimum tree growth and production while minimizing nitrate leaching. The trees are equipped with a microsprinkler irrigation system. The experiment is a randomized complete block factorial with N rates of 0, 0.15, 0.30, and 0.45 lb N/tree/year, and fertigation frequencies of weekly, monthly, and three times per year. Unfertilized control trees are also included in the experimental design. Each of the ten treatments is replicated five times. The trees were harvested in Jan. 2002. Fruit were processed through an automatic fruit sizer, and fruit from each plot were further evaluated for fruit quality. Leaf N concentration was responsive to N rate, but not to fertigation frequency. Leaf N in all fertilized plots was above tissue critical levels. Fruit yield in fertilized plots was higher than in unfertilized plots, but, in fertilized treatments, there was no significant effect of N rate or fertigation frequency on fruit yield or quality. 2002-11 text Article http://hdl.handle.net/10150/223671 Citrus and Deciduous Fruit and Nut Research Report en_US AZ1303 Series P-133 College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ)
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Agriculture -- Arizona
Citrus fruits -- Arizona
Citrus -- Fertilization
Citrus -- Irrigation
spellingShingle Agriculture -- Arizona
Citrus fruits -- Arizona
Citrus -- Fertilization
Citrus -- Irrigation
Thompson, Thomas L.
White, Scott A.
Walworth, James
Sower, Greg
Development of Best Management Practices for Fertigation of Young Citrus Trees, 2002 Report
description 'Newhall' navel oranges on 'Carrizo' rootstock were planted in Mar. 1997 at the Citrus Agricultural Center. The objectives of this experiment were to i) determine the effects of N rate and fertigation frequency for microsprinkler-irrigated navel oranges on tree N status, and crop yield and quality; and ii) develop Best Management Practices which promote optimum tree growth and production while minimizing nitrate leaching. The trees are equipped with a microsprinkler irrigation system. The experiment is a randomized complete block factorial with N rates of 0, 0.15, 0.30, and 0.45 lb N/tree/year, and fertigation frequencies of weekly, monthly, and three times per year. Unfertilized control trees are also included in the experimental design. Each of the ten treatments is replicated five times. The trees were harvested in Jan. 2002. Fruit were processed through an automatic fruit sizer, and fruit from each plot were further evaluated for fruit quality. Leaf N concentration was responsive to N rate, but not to fertigation frequency. Leaf N in all fertilized plots was above tissue critical levels. Fruit yield in fertilized plots was higher than in unfertilized plots, but, in fertilized treatments, there was no significant effect of N rate or fertigation frequency on fruit yield or quality.
author2 Wright, Glenn
author_facet Wright, Glenn
Thompson, Thomas L.
White, Scott A.
Walworth, James
Sower, Greg
author Thompson, Thomas L.
White, Scott A.
Walworth, James
Sower, Greg
author_sort Thompson, Thomas L.
title Development of Best Management Practices for Fertigation of Young Citrus Trees, 2002 Report
title_short Development of Best Management Practices for Fertigation of Young Citrus Trees, 2002 Report
title_full Development of Best Management Practices for Fertigation of Young Citrus Trees, 2002 Report
title_fullStr Development of Best Management Practices for Fertigation of Young Citrus Trees, 2002 Report
title_full_unstemmed Development of Best Management Practices for Fertigation of Young Citrus Trees, 2002 Report
title_sort development of best management practices for fertigation of young citrus trees, 2002 report
publisher College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ)
publishDate 2002
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/223671
work_keys_str_mv AT thompsonthomasl developmentofbestmanagementpracticesforfertigationofyoungcitrustrees2002report
AT whitescotta developmentofbestmanagementpracticesforfertigationofyoungcitrustrees2002report
AT walworthjames developmentofbestmanagementpracticesforfertigationofyoungcitrustrees2002report
AT sowergreg developmentofbestmanagementpracticesforfertigationofyoungcitrustrees2002report
_version_ 1718101340616392704