Development, production, and quality of ‘Chonto’ type tomato grafted on cherry tomato introductions

ABSTRACT Currently, tomato is one of the most cultivated crops worldwide, with the highest economic value, increasing its demand and, thus, its expansion, production, and trade. The tomato crop is susceptible to attack of pathogens with devastating consequences on the decline in yields from 50 to 100%. For this reason, new production methods are proposed such as grafting in wild rootstocks, which have high genetic variability and genes responsible for resistance to fungi, bacteria, viruses, and nematodes. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of grafting commercial tomato cultivars onto cherry tomato genotypes on yield and fruit quality. The experiment was arranged in a completely randomized design with four replications. The experimental unit consisted of four plants. spaced at 0.9 m between rows (channels), 0.30 m between double rows, and 0.4 m between plants. The treatments consisted of the combination of the following factors: three promising rootstocks (IAC391, IAC426, and LA2076), two commercial scions (Calima and Torrano), two grafting methods (cleft and splice), and two ungrafted commercial controls. Yield components, soluble solids content, percentage of fruit quality, and average fruit weight were evaluated. IAC391 was the most promising rootstock, reaching productions similar to those of the controls. The cleft grafting method, reached a success rate of 98.3%. The commercial scion Torrano stood out for achieving the highest yields.

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Main Authors: Franco,Didier Alexander, Arango,Juan Felipe, Hurtado-Salazar,Alejandro, Ceballos-Aguirre,Nelson
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal de Viçosa 2018
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-737X2018000200150
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spelling oai:scielo:S0034-737X20180002001502018-05-10Development, production, and quality of ‘Chonto’ type tomato grafted on cherry tomato introductionsFranco,Didier AlexanderArango,Juan FelipeHurtado-Salazar,AlejandroCeballos-Aguirre,Nelson cleft splice Torrano Calima rootstock ABSTRACT Currently, tomato is one of the most cultivated crops worldwide, with the highest economic value, increasing its demand and, thus, its expansion, production, and trade. The tomato crop is susceptible to attack of pathogens with devastating consequences on the decline in yields from 50 to 100%. For this reason, new production methods are proposed such as grafting in wild rootstocks, which have high genetic variability and genes responsible for resistance to fungi, bacteria, viruses, and nematodes. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of grafting commercial tomato cultivars onto cherry tomato genotypes on yield and fruit quality. The experiment was arranged in a completely randomized design with four replications. The experimental unit consisted of four plants. spaced at 0.9 m between rows (channels), 0.30 m between double rows, and 0.4 m between plants. The treatments consisted of the combination of the following factors: three promising rootstocks (IAC391, IAC426, and LA2076), two commercial scions (Calima and Torrano), two grafting methods (cleft and splice), and two ungrafted commercial controls. Yield components, soluble solids content, percentage of fruit quality, and average fruit weight were evaluated. IAC391 was the most promising rootstock, reaching productions similar to those of the controls. The cleft grafting method, reached a success rate of 98.3%. The commercial scion Torrano stood out for achieving the highest yields.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessUniversidade Federal de ViçosaRevista Ceres v.65 n.2 20182018-03-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-737X2018000200150en10.1590/0034-737x201865020006
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countrycode BR
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region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Franco,Didier Alexander
Arango,Juan Felipe
Hurtado-Salazar,Alejandro
Ceballos-Aguirre,Nelson
spellingShingle Franco,Didier Alexander
Arango,Juan Felipe
Hurtado-Salazar,Alejandro
Ceballos-Aguirre,Nelson
Development, production, and quality of ‘Chonto’ type tomato grafted on cherry tomato introductions
author_facet Franco,Didier Alexander
Arango,Juan Felipe
Hurtado-Salazar,Alejandro
Ceballos-Aguirre,Nelson
author_sort Franco,Didier Alexander
title Development, production, and quality of ‘Chonto’ type tomato grafted on cherry tomato introductions
title_short Development, production, and quality of ‘Chonto’ type tomato grafted on cherry tomato introductions
title_full Development, production, and quality of ‘Chonto’ type tomato grafted on cherry tomato introductions
title_fullStr Development, production, and quality of ‘Chonto’ type tomato grafted on cherry tomato introductions
title_full_unstemmed Development, production, and quality of ‘Chonto’ type tomato grafted on cherry tomato introductions
title_sort development, production, and quality of ‘chonto’ type tomato grafted on cherry tomato introductions
description ABSTRACT Currently, tomato is one of the most cultivated crops worldwide, with the highest economic value, increasing its demand and, thus, its expansion, production, and trade. The tomato crop is susceptible to attack of pathogens with devastating consequences on the decline in yields from 50 to 100%. For this reason, new production methods are proposed such as grafting in wild rootstocks, which have high genetic variability and genes responsible for resistance to fungi, bacteria, viruses, and nematodes. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of grafting commercial tomato cultivars onto cherry tomato genotypes on yield and fruit quality. The experiment was arranged in a completely randomized design with four replications. The experimental unit consisted of four plants. spaced at 0.9 m between rows (channels), 0.30 m between double rows, and 0.4 m between plants. The treatments consisted of the combination of the following factors: three promising rootstocks (IAC391, IAC426, and LA2076), two commercial scions (Calima and Torrano), two grafting methods (cleft and splice), and two ungrafted commercial controls. Yield components, soluble solids content, percentage of fruit quality, and average fruit weight were evaluated. IAC391 was the most promising rootstock, reaching productions similar to those of the controls. The cleft grafting method, reached a success rate of 98.3%. The commercial scion Torrano stood out for achieving the highest yields.
publisher Universidade Federal de Viçosa
publishDate 2018
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-737X2018000200150
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