Chemical Engineering Transactions (Jun 2019)
Production of Pepper Under Different Concentrations of Treated Sewage Effuent
Abstract
The appropriate management of treated sewage effluent (TSE) represents an alternative to irrigation. When used for cultivation in a protected environment, such as a greenhouse, the stability and quality of production can be guaranteed. Thus, the present study aimed to evaluate the morphological and productive characteristics of yellow finger pepper in a protected environment, submitted to five concentrations of treated sewage effluent (T1: 100% fluvial water; T2: 75% fluvial water + 25% TSE; T3: 50% fluvial water + 50% TSE; T4: 25% fluvial water + 75% TSE and T5: 100% TSE), applied through drip irrigation. The experiment was conducted in the central region of Brazil, from June to December 2017. The experimental design was randomized completely blocks with 4 repetition. The morphological and productivity characteristics of the pepper plants were submitted to analysis of variance (F-test), at the of 5% probability level. For the variables in which there were significant treatment effects at p < 0.05, applied regression analysis. There were no statistically significant differences between treatments for the morphological characteristics: plant height, stem diameter, number of leaves, cup diameter, root fresh weight and root dry weight. Among the productive characteristics, productivity and fruit length differed statistically at p < 0.05. The microbiological analysis did not detect contamination both for fruit spares and for seeds. In the analysis of water and residual in the soil, there was a statistical difference between the concentrations of zinc. The increase in the concentration of treated domestic sewage caused a drop in the productivity.