4.6 Article

Root distribution patterns of reticulatus and inodorus melon (Cucumis melo L.) under subsurface deficit irrigation

Journal

IRRIGATION SCIENCE
Volume 36, Issue 6, Pages 301-317

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00271-018-0587-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Texas Department of Agriculture (TDA), Production and Marketing Strategies for melons and artichokes [504610-80980]

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Information on root growth patterns is crucial to understand cultivar adaptations to deficit irrigation, particularly for subsurface drip-irrigated crops, where root systems are more confined than furrow or sprinkler systems. A 2-year field experiment evaluated the effect of deficit irrigation (50% vs. 100% crop evapotranspiration, ETc) on root growth of melon (Cucumis melo L.) cultivars (Mission, Da Vinci, and Super Nectar) on a mollisol soil in southwestern Texas, USA. Root length intensity (L-a; mm cm(-2)), and root length density (RLD; cm cm(-3)) were measured at different growth stages using the minirhizotron and soil core methods, respectively. A higher L-a was recorded in 2012 than in 2011 (3.71mm cm(-2) vs. 0.50mm cm(-2)), due to differences in temporal distribution of rainfall between years. Overall, deficit irrigation increased L-a as compared to 100% ETc, but significant effects occurred at depth (>40cm below the soil surface and >25cm below the subsurface drip tape). In 2012, moderate water deficit promoted deep root growth at the fruit setting stage but not in 2011, while root growth responses to cumulative deficit varied with cultivar. In 2012, deficit irrigation enhanced root growth in cv. Mission (cantaloupe; reticulatus) throughout the season, it was maintained in cv. Da Vinci (Tuscan; reticulatus), while it decreased in cv. Super Nectar (honeydew; inodorus) at the final harvest stage. Thus, the reticulatus melon cvs. Mission and Da Vinci can better adjust to moderate water-deficit conditions as compared to the inodorus melon cv. Super Nectar. Minirhizotron data provided useful information on root growth dynamics in deeper soil layers in a non-destructive way, which makes it a valuable tool in screening cultivars for waterdeficit adaptation.

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