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Figure 1.

Examples of salad crops growing in pillows. A. ‘Outredgeous’ lettuce in 1:1 Fafard #2: arcillite and B. ‘Cherry Bomb II’ radish in arcillite at harvest of trial 2 (28 DAP). Scale bars are 10 cm.
Examples of salad crops growing in pillows. A. ‘Outredgeous’ lettuce in 1:1 Fafard #2: arcillite and B. ‘Cherry Bomb II’ radish in arcillite at harvest of trial 2 (28 DAP). Scale bars are 10 cm.

Figure 2.

Shoot dry mass of twelve species grown in pillows in two different media. Data are per pillow and a pillow contains two plants (except chives which had 10 plants per pillow). Mass is the sum of the shoot dry mass of all plants in a pillow. Each bar represents one pillow.
Shoot dry mass of twelve species grown in pillows in two different media. Data are per pillow and a pillow contains two plants (except chives which had 10 plants per pillow). Mass is the sum of the shoot dry mass of all plants in a pillow. Each bar represents one pillow.

Figure 3.

Shoot dry mass of lettuce grown in five different media types. Data are means of two pillows per media type for each cultivar, with each pillow containing two plants. Error bars indicate standard deviations. Means within a cultivar with different letters are significantly different at P<0.05.
Shoot dry mass of lettuce grown in five different media types. Data are means of two pillows per media type for each cultivar, with each pillow containing two plants. Error bars indicate standard deviations. Means within a cultivar with different letters are significantly different at P<0.05.

Figure 4.

Average chlorophyll content for five species grown in four types of media. Data are averages for three pillows, with pillow values the average of two plants, and plant values averaging three leaves on a plant. Means within plant species between media types with different letters are significantly different at P<0.05. Where letters are absent there is no significant difference within a species. Error bars indicate standard deviations.
Average chlorophyll content for five species grown in four types of media. Data are averages for three pillows, with pillow values the average of two plants, and plant values averaging three leaves on a plant. Means within plant species between media types with different letters are significantly different at P<0.05. Where letters are absent there is no significant difference within a species. Error bars indicate standard deviations.

Figure 5.

Shoot fresh mass of five species grown in four types of media. Data are averages for three pillows, with pillow values the sum of the shoot (shoot and tap root for radish) fresh mass of two plants. Means within plant species between media types with different letters are significantly different at P<0.05. Where letters are absent there is no significant difference within a species. Error bars indicate standard deviations.
Shoot fresh mass of five species grown in four types of media. Data are averages for three pillows, with pillow values the sum of the shoot (shoot and tap root for radish) fresh mass of two plants. Means within plant species between media types with different letters are significantly different at P<0.05. Where letters are absent there is no significant difference within a species. Error bars indicate standard deviations.

Figure 6.

Dry mass of radish shoots and edible tap roots when grown in four types of media. Data are averages for three pillows, with pillow values the sum of two plants. Error bars indicate standard deviations. Means with different letters are significantly different at P<0.05.
Dry mass of radish shoots and edible tap roots when grown in four types of media. Data are averages for three pillows, with pillow values the sum of two plants. Error bars indicate standard deviations. Means with different letters are significantly different at P<0.05.

Figure 7.

Biomass partitioning between the storage root and shoot calculated from dry mass. Data are means from three pillows (six plants) of each media types and error bars indicate standard deviations.
Biomass partitioning between the storage root and shoot calculated from dry mass. Data are means from three pillows (six plants) of each media types and error bars indicate standard deviations.

Calculated maximum edible growth rates of tested species in highest yielding media (highest yielding for dry mass). Calculations use a 28 day growth period and a pillow with external area of 0.015 m2. Mass is an average of three pillows with two plants per pillow. Radish data are for tap root mass while other data are for shoot mass.

Plants Edible Growth Rate Media
(g FM/m2/day) (g DM/m2/day)
Cabbage 42.9 8.0 1:1 Fafard#2: arcillite
Chard 24.3 4.4 7:3 Fafard#2: arcillite
Lettuce 38.3 3.5 1:1 Fafard#2: arcillite
Radish 44.5 4.6 7:3 Fafard#2: arcillite
Snow pea 21.8 4.4 arcillite

Average shoot dry mass (g) (shoot and tap root for radish) per pillow of five species grown in four media types. Data are averages for three pillows, with pillow values the sum of the dry mass of two plants. Means between plant species within a media type with different letters are significantly different at P<0.05. Asterisks indicate means within a species that are significantly different between media types (P<0.05)

Plant MEDIA TYPE
Fafard #2 7:3 Fafard:Arcillite 1:1 Fafard:Arcillite Arcillite
Cabbage 2.21 A 2.29 AB 3.36 A* 2.21 A
Chard 0.92 B 1.86 BC 1.78 B 1.55 AB
Lettuce 0.78 B 1.24 C 1.46 B 1.07 B
Radish 1.63 AB 3.10 A* 1.93 B 1.61 AB
Snow pea 1.25 B 1.53 BC 1.74 B 1.84 AB
eISSN:
2332-7774
Język:
Angielski
Częstotliwość wydawania:
2 razy w roku
Dziedziny czasopisma:
Life Sciences, other, Materials Sciences, Physics