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Influence of Tree Shade on the Growth and Chlorophyll Content of Arabica Coffee Plants Established in an Agroforestry System at Southern Manabí, Ecuador

Influence of Tree Shade on the Growth and Chlorophyll Content of Arabica Coffee Plants Established in an Agroforestry System at Southern Manabí, Ecuador

Julio Adolfo Corzo-Bacallao1*, Carlos Alfredo Salas-Macías1, Osvaldo Fonseca-Rodríguez2,3, Felipe R. Garcés-Fiallos1, Erika Isabel Alcívar-Muñoz1 and Henry Fabricio Baque-Loor1 
 

 
1Department of Agricultural Sciences, Faculty of Agricultural Engineering, Universidad Técnica de Manabí, Km 15 vía Portoviejo-Santa Ana, Lodana, Ecuador, Postal Code: 131302; 2Department of Epidemiology and Global Health, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden; 3Faculty of Environmental Sciences, Czech University of Life Sciences, Czech Republic.

*Correspondence | Julio Adolfo Corzo Bacallao, Department of Agronomic Engineering, Faculty of Agronomy, Technical University of Manabí, Portoviejo, Ecuador; Email: [email protected] 

ABSTRACT

The experiment was developed under production conditions on a farm in the Santa Ana city, south-central region of the province of Manabí, Ecuador, in a mountainous area of approximately 300 meters above sea level. Coffee (Coffea arabica, sp.) production is carried out in a context of peasant family agriculture, with an agroforestry system with coffee trees of the Sarchimor variety planted at 1.5 x 1.5 m, interspersed with tree species typical of the dry forest. The system involves manual weed control, without fertilization, irrigation, phytosanitary control, or shade regulation. In this scenario, and during an experimental period of 90 days (03/08/2022 - 26/10/2022), phenological variables of coffee trees maintained in a study area of 50 x 50 m at a high (S1: 51-70%) and low (S3: 1-30%) shade level was compared with those obtained at an intermediate shade level considered as standard (S2: 31-50%). The phenological variables related to vegetative development (Total Branches) of coffee plants showed higher values in S2 compared to S1 and S3. These results are related to the higher photosynthetic activity associated with the higher intensity of incident solar radiation, although the relationship is not linear. In our results, flowering and fruiting were not affected by the level of shade, nor were their precursors, such as nodes per productive branch and productive nodes per productive branch. On the other hand, coffee plants at full sun exposure in S1, without shade, decreased chlorophyll measured in SPAD units, as a possible compensation for the increase in photosynthetically active uptake in that condition.

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Sarhad Journal of Agriculture

September

Vol.40, Iss. 3, Pages 680-1101

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