Horticulturae (Sep 2022)
Root Exploration, Initial Moisture Conditions, and Irrigation Scheduling Influence Hydration of Stratified and Non-Stratified Substrates
Abstract
Soilless substrate stratification (i.e., layering unique substrates within a single container) is an emerging substrate management strategy that may provide opportunities to augment nursery resource use. As such, this research aimed to analyze water movement through containers during hydration events under different initial moisture conditions. The results indicated substrate stratification had minimal influence on water movement compared to non-stratified systems (uniformly filled nursery containers). Cyclic irrigation significantly increased the stratified substrates’ ability to retain water when irrigated at 20% volumetric water content (p 0.0001) and significantly decreased the total volume leached (p 0.0001). Moreover, irrigating the substrate profile with shallow and more frequent irrigations facilitated stratified substrates ty reach effective container capacity conditions (p 0.0001n compared to non-stratified systems. The stratified systems took longer to leach all gravitational pores (p = 0.0266). In dry moisture conditions, non-stratified substrates were more hydrated when cyclic irrigation applications were applied compared to single applications (p = 0.0492). This study demonstrated that cyclic irrigation scheduling enhanced water retention in both non-stratified and stratified profiles under different initial moisture conditions and can be used as an irrigation strategy when dry substrate conditions prevail.
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