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No Reduction in Yield of Young Robusta Coffee When Grown under Shade Trees in Ecuadorian Amazonia

Little is known on what impact shade trees have on the physiology of Coffea canephora (robusta coffee) under tropical humid conditions. To fill this gap, a field experiment was conducted in the Ecuadorian Amazon to investigate how growth, nutrition (leaf N), phenological state (BBCH-scale) and yield...

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Autores principales: Piato, Kevin, Subía, Cristian, Lefort, François, Pico, Jimmy, Calderón, Darío, Norgrove, Lindsey
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9224700/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35743838
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life12060807
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author Piato, Kevin
Subía, Cristian
Lefort, François
Pico, Jimmy
Calderón, Darío
Norgrove, Lindsey
author_facet Piato, Kevin
Subía, Cristian
Lefort, François
Pico, Jimmy
Calderón, Darío
Norgrove, Lindsey
author_sort Piato, Kevin
collection PubMed
description Little is known on what impact shade trees have on the physiology of Coffea canephora (robusta coffee) under tropical humid conditions. To fill this gap, a field experiment was conducted in the Ecuadorian Amazon to investigate how growth, nutrition (leaf N), phenological state (BBCH-scale) and yield of 5-year-old robusta coffee shrubs are affected by the presence or absence of leguminous trees, the type (organic v conventional) and intensity of management. The experiment was a factorial 5 × 4 design with four cropping systems: intensive conventional (IC), moderate conventional (MC), intensive organic (IO) and low organic (LO), and with five shading systems in a split-plot arrangement: full sun (SUN), both Erythrina spp. and Myroxylon balsamum (TaE), M. balsamum (TIM), E. spp. (ERY) and Inga edulis (GUA). Three monthly assessments were made. Cherry yields of coffee shrubs under moderate shade (c. 25%) were similar to those under high light exposure. Coffee shrubs grown with either E. spp. or I. edulis were taller (+10%) and had higher leaf N concentrations (22%) than those grown without consistent shade. Unless receiving c. 25% of shade, coffee shrubs grown under organic cropping systems showed reduced growth (25%). No correlation was found between height, cherry yield and leaf N. Both shading and cropping systems affected leaf N concentration, also depending on phenological state and yield. Further research is needed to confirm our findings in the long-term as well as to elucidate how leguminous trees may induce physiological responses in robusta coffee under humid tropical conditions.
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spelling pubmed-92247002022-06-24 No Reduction in Yield of Young Robusta Coffee When Grown under Shade Trees in Ecuadorian Amazonia Piato, Kevin Subía, Cristian Lefort, François Pico, Jimmy Calderón, Darío Norgrove, Lindsey Life (Basel) Article Little is known on what impact shade trees have on the physiology of Coffea canephora (robusta coffee) under tropical humid conditions. To fill this gap, a field experiment was conducted in the Ecuadorian Amazon to investigate how growth, nutrition (leaf N), phenological state (BBCH-scale) and yield of 5-year-old robusta coffee shrubs are affected by the presence or absence of leguminous trees, the type (organic v conventional) and intensity of management. The experiment was a factorial 5 × 4 design with four cropping systems: intensive conventional (IC), moderate conventional (MC), intensive organic (IO) and low organic (LO), and with five shading systems in a split-plot arrangement: full sun (SUN), both Erythrina spp. and Myroxylon balsamum (TaE), M. balsamum (TIM), E. spp. (ERY) and Inga edulis (GUA). Three monthly assessments were made. Cherry yields of coffee shrubs under moderate shade (c. 25%) were similar to those under high light exposure. Coffee shrubs grown with either E. spp. or I. edulis were taller (+10%) and had higher leaf N concentrations (22%) than those grown without consistent shade. Unless receiving c. 25% of shade, coffee shrubs grown under organic cropping systems showed reduced growth (25%). No correlation was found between height, cherry yield and leaf N. Both shading and cropping systems affected leaf N concentration, also depending on phenological state and yield. Further research is needed to confirm our findings in the long-term as well as to elucidate how leguminous trees may induce physiological responses in robusta coffee under humid tropical conditions. MDPI 2022-05-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9224700/ /pubmed/35743838 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life12060807 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Piato, Kevin
Subía, Cristian
Lefort, François
Pico, Jimmy
Calderón, Darío
Norgrove, Lindsey
No Reduction in Yield of Young Robusta Coffee When Grown under Shade Trees in Ecuadorian Amazonia
title No Reduction in Yield of Young Robusta Coffee When Grown under Shade Trees in Ecuadorian Amazonia
title_full No Reduction in Yield of Young Robusta Coffee When Grown under Shade Trees in Ecuadorian Amazonia
title_fullStr No Reduction in Yield of Young Robusta Coffee When Grown under Shade Trees in Ecuadorian Amazonia
title_full_unstemmed No Reduction in Yield of Young Robusta Coffee When Grown under Shade Trees in Ecuadorian Amazonia
title_short No Reduction in Yield of Young Robusta Coffee When Grown under Shade Trees in Ecuadorian Amazonia
title_sort no reduction in yield of young robusta coffee when grown under shade trees in ecuadorian amazonia
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9224700/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35743838
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life12060807
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