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The impact of changing light levels and fruit load on the pattern of tomato yields
Authors:SR Adams  VM Valdeés  CRJ Cave  JS Fenlon
Institution:1. Horticulture Research International, Wellesbourne,Warwick, UKsteven.adams@hri.ac.uk;3. Horticulture Research International, Wellesbourne,Warwick, UK
Abstract:Summary

Experiments in glasshouse and controlled environment facilities investigated the effect of different fruit removal and lighting/shading treatments on the pattern of tomato yields. While the removal of flowering trusses resulted in a yield loss about eight weeks later, there was little loss in cumulative yield as assimilates were distributed to neighbouring trusses. In the growth room experiment, increased photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) for one week resulted in a period of increased yield from 4–6 weeks after the start of the treatment, followed by suppressed yields due to smaller fruits on subsequent trusses. However, neither fruit load nor assimilate availability appeared to be responsible for the fluctuations in yield recorded within the glasshouse crop. In this experiment fruit size remained fairly consistent (except when fruit removal treatments were applied), whereas the number of fruits picked per week exhibited much greater variability. This was the case even when all trusses were pruned to leave five fruits, and so was not due to a cycle in the number of fruits set per truss. The flushes in yield were found to be a consequence of a hastening of fruit maturation.
Keywords:
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