Effects of Irrigation and Nitrogen Rates on Growth, Yield, and Quality of Muskmelon in Semiarid Regions
- 1 April 2005
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Plant Nutrition
- Vol. 28 (4) , 621-638
- https://doi.org/10.1081/pln-200052635
Abstract
Muskmelon (Cucumis melo L. cv. ‘Polidor’) were grown under field conditions to investigate the effects of different nitrogen (N) levels (0, 40, 80, and 120 kg ha− 1) on plant growth, water use efficiency, fruit yield and quality (weight, sizes, and water-soluble dry matter), leaf relative water content, and macro nutrition under three different irrigation regimes. Irrigation was applied based on cumulative class A pan evaporation (Ep). Plant treatments were as follows: (1) well-watered treatment (C) received 100% replenishment of Ep on a daily basis, (2) water-stressed treatment (WS) received 75% replenishment of Ep at three-day intervals, and (3) severely water-stressed (SWS): treatment received 50% replenishment of Ep at six- day intervals. Plants grown under C at 120 kg N ha− 1 produced significantly higher biomass (175.6 g plant− 1), fruit yield (36.05 t ha− 1), fruit weight (2.25 kg fruit− 1), and leaf relative water content (93.5%) under increasing N levels than did the two deficit irrigation treatments. The WS or SWS treatments caused reductions in all parameters measured except water-soluble dry matter (SDM) concentrations in fruits compared with those receiving unstressed (C) treatment. The WS irrigation regime with 80 kg ha− 1 N significantly improved the fruit yield and size, plant dry matter, leaf area, and IWUE compared with the SWS regime. Increased N significantly enhanced foliar N in the unstressed plants. Increasing N rate in the SWS treatment did not increase fruit yield with the same trend found in the WS and C treatments with increasing N levels. The yield reduction under severe water shortage was much more severe at high N rates. Water use (ET) at the C treatment at 120 kg ha− 1 N ranged between 160 and 165 cm, while SWS reduced ET to 90 cm at 0 and 40 kg ha− 1 N. Nitrogen supply modified water use at C and WS irrigation regimes. Muskmelon yield response to N rate was quadratic and differed with the level of irrigation. This moderate water deficit (SW) may be an alternative irrigation choice with a suitable N application rate for muskmelon growers in arid and semi-arid regions if the goal is to irrigate an agricultural area with limited water supply for more growers, but not if it is maximizing economic yield. Growers should accept a significant yield reduction in exchange for water conservation.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pretransplant Nutritional Conditioning Effects on Seedling Growth and on Fruit Yield in MuskmelonJournal of Vegetable Crop Production, 2001
- A long-term experiment to study the role of mulches in the physiology and macro-nutrition of strawberry grown under water stressAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 2001
- Deficit irrigation and nitrogen effects on maize in a Sahelian environmentAgricultural Water Management, 2000
- Trickle Irrigation of Vegetables: Water Conservation Without Yield ReductionJournal of Vegetable Crop Production, 2000
- DRIP CHEMIGATION OF IMIDACLOPRID UNDER PLASTIC MULCH INCREASED YIELD AND DECREASED LEACHING CAUSED BY RAINFALLTransactions of the ASAE, 2000
- Effects of drip irrigation scheduling on muskmelon yield and qualityScientia Horticulturae, 1997
- Water use and yield of maize with two levels of nitrogen fertilization in SW SpainAgricultural Water Management, 1996
- Nitrogen uptake and ultiization by Bell Pepper in subtropical AustraliaJournal of Plant Nutrition, 1993
- MORPHOLOGICAL AND ANATOMICAL EFFECTS OF SEVERE DROUGHT ON THE ROOTS OF LOLIUM PERENNE L.New Phytologist, 1987
- Nutrient deficiencies and toxicities in plants: NitrogenJournal of Plant Nutrition, 1979