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Wednesday September 25, 2024 8:30am - 8:45am HST
Presentation: Oral ASHS 2024 Keywords: CEA, greenhouse, Fragaria ×ananassa, temperature Utilizing Controlled Environment Agriculture to Enhance the Yield and Flavor of Strawberries Nicholas Cooley, Joshua Vanderweide, and Roberto Lopez In the U.S., strawberries (Fragaria ×ananassa) are the most popular berry fruit with a value of $2.8B. In 2022, strawberries experienced 12% growth in annual sales, with the majority of field production occurring in California and Florida. To meet consumer demand for flavorful, fresh, local, and year-round fresh strawberries, the industry is expanding controlled environment (CE) production of day-neutral (everbearing) cultivars in greenhouses and indoor farms. Within CEs, growers can potentially meet these demands through the manipulation of environmental parameters such as temperature, light, vapor pressure deficit, and carbon dioxide concentration. Despite the recent growth, CE growers are reporting low profitability. This imbalance of production and profitability stems from high energy costs, supra-optimal greenhouse temperatures during parts of the year, and low yield from the industry standard cultivar ‘Albion’. For producers to be considered profitable, they must reach an approximate annual yield of 15 kg∙m–2, which equates to a weekly yield of around 0.3 kg∙m–2. The objectives of our research are to 1) quantify the yield of other day-neutral cultivars in greenhouses; 2) determine how day and night temperature influence yield and fruit quality parameters; and 3) develop a model to predict the cardinal temperatures of each cultivar. Three cultivars, ‘Albion’, ‘Cabrillo’, and ‘Monterey’ were grown at day/ night temperatures (12 h/ 12 h) of 15/7, 18/10, 21/13, 24/16 or 27/19 °C, under a 16-h photoperiod, and a target DLI of 15 mol·m–2·d–1. Fruits were harvested three times weekly and at harvest, berry weight, diameter, color, shape, distortion, brix content, and flavor-related volatile organic concentrations were recorded. After 12 weeks of harvest, the highest average weekly yield was 0.17, 0.19, and 0.24 kg∙m–2 for ‘Albion’, ‘Cabrillo’ ‘Monterey’ at 18/10, 24/16, and 24/16 C, respectively. While the highest combined overall yield for all three cultivars was at 24/16 °C, the highest average berry weight differed. At day and night temperatures of 18/10, 18/10, and 15/7 °C, ‘Albion’, ‘Cabrillo’, and ‘Monterey had the highest average berry weights, respectively. Our results collectively indicate there are higher yielding day-neutral cultivars than the industry standard ‘Albion’.
Speakers
NC

Nicholas Cooley

Michigan State University
Wednesday September 25, 2024 8:30am - 8:45am HST
Coral 2

Attendees (5)


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