The influence of organic and conventional fertilisation and crop protection practices, preceding crop, harvest year and weather conditions on yield and quality of potato (Solanum tuberosum) in a long-term management trial

Palmer, Mike W. and Cooper, Julia and Tetard-Jones, Catherine and Srednicka-Tober, Dominika and Baranski, Marcin and Eyre, Mick and Shotton, Peter N. and Volakakis, Nikolaos and Çakmak, İsmail and Öztürk, Levent and Leifert, Carlo and Wilcockson, Steve J. and Bilsborrow, Paul E. (2013) The influence of organic and conventional fertilisation and crop protection practices, preceding crop, harvest year and weather conditions on yield and quality of potato (Solanum tuberosum) in a long-term management trial. European Journal of Agronomy, 49 . pp. 83-92. ISSN 1161-0301 (Print) 1873-7331 (Online)

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Abstract

The effects of organic versus conventional crop management practices (fertilisation, crop protection) and preceding crop on potato tuber yield (total, marketable, tuber size grade distribution) and quality (proportion of diseased, green and damaged tubers, tuber macro-nutrient concentrations) parameters were investigated over six years (2004–2009) as part of a long-term factorial field trial in North East England. Inter-year variability (the effects of weather and preceding crop) was observed to have a profound effect on yields and quality parameters, and this variability was greater in organic fertility systems. Total and marketable yields were significantly reduced by the use of both organic crop protection and fertility management. However, the yield gap between organic and conventional fertilisation regimes was greater and more variable than that between crop protection practices. This appears to be attributable mainly to lower and less predictable nitrogen supply in organically fertilised crops. Increased incidence of late blight in organic crop protection systems only occurred when conventional fertilisation was applied. In organically fertilised crops yield was significantly higher following grass/red clover leys than winter wheat, but there was no pre-crop effect in conventionally fertilised crops. The results highlight that nitrogen supply from organic fertilisers rather than inefficient pest and disease control may be the major limiting factor for yields in organic potato production systems.
Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: Potato; Organic farming; Fertiliser; Crop protection; Late blight; Weather
Subjects: S Agriculture > S Agriculture (General)
S Agriculture > SB Plant culture > SB175-177 Food crops
S Agriculture > SB Plant culture > SB183-317 Field crops
Divisions: Faculty of Engineering and Natural Sciences > Academic programs > Biological Sciences & Bio Eng.
Faculty of Engineering and Natural Sciences
Depositing User: Levent Öztürk
Date Deposited: 07 Jan 2014 15:05
Last Modified: 01 Aug 2019 12:29
URI: https://research.sabanciuniv.edu/id/eprint/22534

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