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Elsevier, Scientia Horticulturae, 1-4(96), p. 151-162

DOI: 10.1016/s0304-4238(02)00121-8

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Lemon yield and fruit quality affected by NPK fertilization

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Abstract

A field trial with Sicilian lemon on Volkameriana rootstock was carried out, during 7 years, in a sandy and low fertility oxisol in the State of São Paulo, Brazil, in order to determine quantitative relationships of lemon yield and fruit quality with NPK fertilization. The experiment was set up in an incomplete factorial design of the (1/2) 43 type, summing up 32 treatments, with yearly rates of N (30, 100, 170, and 240kgha−1), P (9, 27, 62 and 79.0kgha−1), and K (24, 91, 158, and 225kgha−1), split in three applications from early spring to late summer. Mathematical models of the type Y=b0+b11N+b12N2+b21P+b22P2+b31K+b32K2+b12NP+b13NK+b23PK were adjusted to selected variables related to fruit yield and quality, soil, and leaf analyses. The maximum fruit yield, averaged over six harvests, was reached with the rates calculated with the response curve as N=220kgha−1, P=20kgha−1 and K=310kgha−1. For K the optimum rate was much higher than the highest rate applied. The effects of nitrogen and potassium on fruit yield were, respectively, quadratic and linear. The response of lemon to phosphorus, in the first 4 years was linear up to the highest P rate applied, which increased the average yield over 15%. In the fifth year, there was no response to P and in the sixth year, a negative response was observed. These results might be related to P accumulation in the top layer of soil, mainly for the highest rates of P, as shown by the results of soil testing within the years. Leaf analyses for N, P and K, related with maximum yield, were respectively, 15–18, 1.8–2.2 and 15–20gkg−1, for samples taken from fruit bearing terminals. Fruit quality characteristics were affected by nutrient rates only after the second year of fertilizer application. Phosphorus and potassium were the most effective nutrients to increase fruit size. Negative effects of N and K were observed on the essential oil content of fruits, whereas P promoted a positive trend. The effect of P application on oil concentration was closely related to its effect on peel thickness.