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Controlled Environment Agriculture Center
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Controlled Environment Agriculture Program
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RESEARCH PROJECTS
Growth & Development Of Greenhouse Crops
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Research Publications & Projects
A Comparison of Growth and Yield in Grafted vs. Non-grafted Beef Type Tomatoes

Dr. Patricia Rorabaugh, Plant Sciences

The experiment comparing the productivity of grafted and non-grafted tomatoes is the second in a series in the University of Arizona’s CEAC Crop Production Teaching Laboratory that has been completed with the help of PLS 217 and 394 student classes.  The beef type tomato variety, Rapsodie (chosen because of its excellent performance in previous trials at the UA/CEAC in Tucson), was grown under various treatments: (1) from seed, (2) grafted to a Maxi-Fort root stock and trained to a single stem, (3) grafted to Maxi-Fort and trained to two stems, 4) grafted back to a Rapsodie root stock and trained to a single stem and 5) Rapsodie from seed but trained to two stems.  Grafting has been used  in the past primarily to confer disease resistance to plants growing in soil by combining a good producing scion (aerial portion of plant) to a disease resistant root (root stock).  Recently, however, greenhouse tomato growers have been using grafting to combine a variety that produces a large number of good quality fruit (scion) with a vigorous rootstock that more efficiently transports water and nutrients.  To our knowledge, these were the first such side-by-side comparisons of these treatments and will hopefully yield interesting data relevant to the industry.

Cooperators:  Dr. Merle Jensen, Dr. Roger Huber, Dr. Mary Olsen, Mr. Stephen Kania, PLS 217 & PLS 394 (383) Greenhouse Hydroponic Classes, and members of the Campus Agricultural Center greenhouse staff. 

Completed June 2005
Growth & Yield in Grafted vs. Non-Grafted Tomatoes Optimization of Transplant Transportation Conditions
Validation of Vegetative & Reproductive Growth Status
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