The Use of Diagnostic Optical Tools to Assess Nitrogen Status and to Guide Fertilization of Vegetables
Type
ArticleKAUST Department
Biological and Environmental Science and Engineering (BESE) DivisionCenter for Desert Agriculture
Date
2011-06Permanent link to this record
http://hdl.handle.net/10754/668100
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Dynamic fertilization management is a way of bringing nutrients to the plant when they are crucial for its development. However, destructive measurements of crop nitrogen (N) status are still too costly and time consuming to justify their use, and the implementation of methodologies based on non-destructive, quick, and easy to use tools for plant nutritional status monitoring appears as an appealing opportunity. Several optical tools for plant monitoring have been developed in recent years, and many studies have assessed their ability to discriminate plant N status. Such tools can measure at leaf level (hand-held optical instruments) or may consider the canopy of a plant or few plants (portable radiometers) or even measure areas, such as a field, a farm, or a region (aerial photography). The application of vegetation indices, which combine the readings at different wavelengths, may improve the reliability of the collected data, giving a more precise determination of the plant nutritional status. In this article, we report on the state of the art of the available optical tools for plant N status monitoring.Citation
Gianquinto, G., Orsini, F., Sambo, P., & D’Urzo, M. P. (2011). The Use of Diagnostic Optical Tools to Assess Nitrogen Status and to Guide Fertilization of Vegetables. HortTechnology, 21(3), 287–292. doi:10.21273/horttech.21.3.287Journal
HortTechnologyae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.21273/horttech.21.3.287