• Title/Summary/Keyword: non-fertilizer substrate

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Effects of Some Environment-friendly Farming Materials on Growth of Pepper and Tomato Seedlings under Low Solar Radiation Conditions (저일조 조건에서 몇 가지 친환경농자재가 고추와 토마토의 유묘 생육에 미치는 영향)

  • Um, Yeong-Cheol;Seo, Tae-Cheol;Jang, Yoon-Ah;Lee, Sang-Gyu;Lee, Jun-Gu;Choi, Chang-Sun;Oh, Sang-Seok
    • Journal of Bio-Environment Control
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    • v.20 no.4
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    • pp.269-276
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    • 2011
  • The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of 3 environment- friendly farming materials on the growth of pepper and tomato seedlings under low level of solar radiation. The pepper and tomato seedlings were separately grown on commercial substrate and non-fertilizer substrate under 30% shading condition, respectively. The microbe-, enzyme-, and amino acid-supplements were used for the foliar application to the seedlings. The application of enzyme- and amino acid-supplements significantly enhanced the growth of tomato and pepper seedlings grown on non-fertilizer substrate, while there was no significant effect on the seedlings grown on commercial substrate. The foliar application of enzyme- and amino acid-supplements reduced the days to flowering by 3 to 4 days and lowered the node order of fruit set in tomato plants grown on non-fertilizer substrate. The results showed that the enzyme- and amino acid-supplements could enhance the seedling growth and lower the node order of fruit set under limited nutritional conditions.

Feeding rate and growth rate of earthworm(Oligochaeta : Eisenia fetida) population on the spent substrate of the agaric-mushroom cultivation (느타리버섯 폐배지에 대한 줄지렁이(Eisenia fetida) 개체군의 섭식률 및 생장률)

  • Bae, Yun-Hwan;Yang, Yong-Un
    • Journal of the Korea Organic Resources Recycling Association
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    • v.18 no.4
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    • pp.45-53
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    • 2010
  • Feeding rate and growth rate of earthworm population on the variously pretreated spent materials of the agaric-mushroom cultivation were investigated. When the spent mushroom substrates with different aging periods were supplied to earthworm, feeding rate and growth rate of earthworm population on spent mushroom substrates aged less than 10 days were higher than that on spent mushroom substrates aged more than 20 days. Feeding rate and growth rate were not increased when the spent mushroom substrate mixed with vermicasts or nitrogenous fertilizer was supplied. Feeding rate and growth rate on the ground mushroom substrate were higher than that on the non-ground mushroom substrate. Especially when the ground mushroom substrate was mixed with rice bran and supplied to earthworms, growth rate was much higher than that on the non-ground spent mushroom substrate; it increased 1.85 times.

Optimization of Cultivation Conditions on Effective Seedlings of Veronica rotunda var. subintegra (Nakai) T.Yamaz. (산꼬리풀의 효과적인 육묘를 위한 재배조건 최적화)

  • Lee, Sang In;Yeon, Soo Ho;Cho, Ju Sung;Jeong, Mi Jin;Lee, Cheol Hee
    • Journal of Bio-Environment Control
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    • v.29 no.2
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    • pp.181-188
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    • 2020
  • This study was conducted to identify the optimal conditions for seedling growth in Veronica rotunda var. subintegra (Nakai) T.Yamaz. which a endemic plant and can be development as ornamental plants. We sowed V. rotunda var. subintegra (Nakai) T.Yamaz. seeds, and exposed the seedling was different treatment conditions. We varied soil type and fertilizer concentration, shading ratio, additional fertilizer concentration, pretreatment light exposure and collection time of seeds. We found that seedling growth was good in horticultural substrate (with no additional fertilizer), but mixed soils supplemented with fertilizer inhibited growth, regardless of the fertilizer concentration. In the 55% shading treatment, seedling growth was greater than in the non-shading treatment. High concentration addition of fertilizer (Hyponex) promoted plant growth, in terms of both plant length and fresh weight. Exposure of seeds to a red light-source prior to germination had a greater effect on seedling growth than exposure to other light sources. Seedlings exhibited better growth when grown from seed collected in 2018, rather than 2017.