10.6084/m9.figshare.9985616.v1
Thiago Tássio de Sousa Silva
Thiago Tássio de Sousa
Silva
Grasiela Spada
Grasiela
Spada
Marianne Fidalgo de Faria
Marianne Fidalgo de
Faria
Lívia Mara Lima Goulart
Lívia Mara Lima
Goulart
Edson Luiz Furtado
Edson Luiz
Furtado
José Raimundo Souza Passos
José Raimundo Souza
Passos
Iraê Amaral Guerrini
Iraê Amaral
Guerrini
Plant health and quality of Eucalyptus urophylla x Eucalyptus grandis seedlings receiving phosphite and silicon application
SciELO journals
2019
Phosphite
Eucalyptus
bacteriosis
seedling quality
severity
2019-10-16 02:40:59
Dataset
https://scielo.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Plant_health_and_quality_of_Eucalyptus_urophylla_x_Eucalyptus_grandis_seedlings_receiving_phosphite_and_silicon_application/9985616
<p></p><p>ABSTRACT The forest sector is one of the major contributors in social, economic and environmental terms to Brazil. Considering this sector, eucalyptus planting is the most important of the segment, representing 5.56 million hectares. The first step in the eucalyptus forest establishment process is seedling production, which in Brazil is done through cloning, ensuring the quality of the seedlings planted in the nursery. However, one of the main challenges in nurseries is pathogen control and the variety of eucalyptus species and hybrids that are susceptible to disease. The use of phosphite and silicon is hypothesized to decrease bacteriosis severity level and maintain seedling quality in forest nurseries. Therefore, to test these hypotheses, this study aimed to verify the effect of phosphite and silicon application on bacteriosis control and Eucalyptus urograndis seedling quality in a commercial nursery. Experimental design was completely randomized with four replicates and ten treatments (“Zincazot”, “Fitofós-Cu”, “Fitofós-K”, “Fitofós-Zn-Mn”, “Silamol”, “Amorux”, “Fitofós-Cu + Terra-sorb”, “Fitofós-K + Terra sorb”, “Fitofós-Zn-Mn + Terra Sorb”, and control); each replicate consisted of a tray containing 176 seedlings including control, which did not receive any application. The applications were performed on the leaves, from seven days before ministumps were collected from the mini-clonal garden until seedlings completed 120 days old. Results were compared according to Tukey’s test at 5% probability. Application of products containing phosphite and silicon did not reduce the severity of bacteriosis caused by Xanthonomas sp. in Eucalyptus urograndis seedlings in the nursery. There was no significant effect of treatments on the evaluated quality patterns. At 120 days, seedlings of all treatments, except control, had adequate survival rate, evidencing a positive effect of treatments on this variable, which is of great economic importance for a commercial nursery.</p><p></p>