Effects of different coir types on growth, phytochemical accumulation and antioxidant activity in spinach

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

ISHS

Abstract

Crush chips and Coir - Medium) on plant growth, leaf nutrient concentration, total phenols, ascorbic acid, antioxidant activity (FRAP and DPPH) and peroxidase activity were evaluated in spinach (Spinacia oleracea L. cv. Manatee). Soil blocked spinach seedlings (five seedlings per block) were transplanted (on 16 February 2017) at 18 days after emergence into to Styrofoam planting boxes (100-cm long × 25-cm wide × 10-cm high) filled with 14 L of substrate. Each planting box was irrigated daily by drip and fertilized with a complete nutrient solution. The nitrate concentration and pH in drainage water were higher in coir-chips than the others substrates. Shoot dry weight, leaf area and yield (fresh yield) in cocopeat and coir-medium were similar than those obtained in peat. Leaf nutrient concentration for the most leaf nutrients in cocopeat and coir-medium did not differ from those observed in peat. Leaf blade ascorbic acid, total phenols, FRAP, DPPH and peroxidase activity were affected by substrate type. Leaf blades of plants grown in cocopeat presented the highest value of total phenols, high values of DPPH and ascorbic acid and the lowest value of the peroxidase activity. The findings of this research suggest that the spinach grown in the different coir types can have a longer shelf life than in peat.

Description

Citation

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By