CABI

Vol.7 No.2 (2012)

A COMPARISON OF ORGANIC AND CHEMICAL
FERTILIZERS FOR TOMATO PRODUCTION

H. Kochakinezhad 1, Gh. Peyvas t2, A.K. Kashi 1, J.A. Olfati 2*
& A. Asadii 2

Abstract
Tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) is one of the most popular and versatile vegetables in the world, and organic production with a high yield and desirable quality is a target of many producers. The effect of four different fertilizers (chemical, municipal solid waste compost, cattle manure, and spent mushroom compost) on four commercial tomato cultivars (Redstone, Flat, Peto Pride and Chief) was assessed in this research. The highest yield was obtained with the Chief cultivar when fertilized with chemical fertilizer and the lowest value was obtained with Peto Pride fertilized with 20 tonnes per hectare (t/ha) of cow manure. The difference between the two classes of fertilizers (organic and chemical) was not very high so that organic fertilizers are competitive and may be a suitable replacement for chemical fertilizer. According to our results, to achieve maximum yields with organic fertilizers, 20 t/ha of spent mushroom compost can be recommended for the Redstone cultivar, 30 t/ha of cow manure for Flat, 300 t/ha of municipal solid waste compost for Peto Pride, and 300 t/ha of municipal solid waste compost or 20 t/ha of spent mushroom compost can be recommended for the Chief cultivar. These recommended organic fertilizing regimes achieved cultivar yields comparable to the chemical fertilizer treatments, achieving a yield of 98.4% for Redstone, 99.5% for Flat, 97.6% for Peto Pride, and 95.7% for Chief.

Keywords: Tomato, municipal solid waste compost, cattle manure, cow manure, spent mushroom compost, organic agriculture.

 

Back | Full Text

 

Full Text

The Full Text of papers are PDF files. To view these files you can download the latest version of the free Adobe Acrobat Reader here, if you do not already have it installed

Author Contact

1. Islamic Azad University, Karaj branch, Karaj, Iran I.R.
2. University of Guilan, Horticultural Department, Rasht, Iran I.R.
*Email: jamalaliolfati@gmail.com



 

 

Copyright © Journal of Organic Systems
ISSN 1177-4258

Site Design by Paradigm | Site Construction by Allsorts Design