TY - JOUR AU - Caradonia, Federica AU - Ronga, Domenico AU - Flore, Alessia AU - Barbieri, Riccardo AU - Moulin, Lionel AU - Terzi, Valeria AU - Francia, Enrico PY - 2020/05/29 Y2 - 2024/03/28 TI - Biostimulants and cherry rootstock increased tomato fruit yield and quality in sustainable farming systems JF - Italian Journal of Agronomy JA - Ital J Agronomy VL - 15 IS - 2 SE - Original Articles DO - 10.4081/ija.2020.1553 UR - https://www.agronomy.it/agro/article/view/1553 SP - 121-131 AB - <p>Nowadays one of the main challenges in agriculture is to increase crop yield and quality in a sustainable way. Organic farming system (OFS) is considered more eco-friendly than the conventional farming system (CFS). However, cash crops showed a reduced yield when cultivated in OFS, and among them processing tomato reported the highest yield gap between OFS and CFS. Therefore, the objective of this study was to investigate, both in greenhouse and field experiments, the combined effects of a cherry rootstock, genotype ‘Tomito’, and the applications of different microbial biostimulants (single species and consortia). The agronomic performance of a commercial processing tomato genotype, ‘H3402’, was assessed in order to increase fruit yield and quality in sustainable farming systems. In greenhouse experiment, the use of ‘Tomito’ as rootstock highlighted both the highest plant height (35 cm) and leaf chlorophyll content (25.20), while plants inoculated with <em>A. brasiliensis</em> showed the highest number of flowers (4.5). In field experiment, the combined use of grafting and microbial biostimulants increased marketable (on average 2.3 kg plant<sup>–1</sup>) and total yields (on average 2.5 kg plant<sup>–1</sup>) in comparison with the genotype ‘H3402’. All the investigated treatments reduced the number of fruits affected by blossom-end rot (on average –4.7 fruits plant<sup>–1</sup>), and <em>A. brasiliensis</em> also improved the fruit solid soluble content, recording values of 6.23 °Brix and 3.54 of Brix t ha<sup>–1</sup>.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><strong>Highlights<br></strong>- In the greenhouse experiment, the use of the rootstock ‘Tomito’ increased the leaf chlorophyll content and plant height<br>- In the greenhouse experiment, <em>Azospirillum brasiliensis</em> sp 245 induced early flowering <br>- In the field experiment, the use of rootstock ‘Tomito’ increased the number of fruits in comparison with non-grafted plants<br>- Grafted plants inoculated with <em>Paraburkholderia graminis</em> or the bacterial consortium showed the highest total yield</p> ER -