Tomato fruit parthenocarpy and yield increase in response to chlorophenoxyacetic acid

Authors

  • Rosalina D. Poliquit Department of Biological Sciences, College of Arts and Sciences, Leyte State University, Baybay, Leyte 6521-A, Philippines
  • Misael T. Diputado Jr Department of Horticulture, College of Agriculture, Leyte State University, Baybay, Leyte 6521-A Philippines

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32945/atr2912.2007

Keywords:

chlorophenoxyacetic acid, fruit set, plant growth regulator, parthenocarpy, tomato

Abstract

An experiment was conducted to evaluate the influence of rate and time of application of chlorophenoxyacetic acid (CPA) on the fruit set, yield and quality of tomato (variety, Improved Pope) The application of CPA enhanced fruit set, reduced the number of days to fruit maturity and consequently increased the yield and yield components of tomato. The optimum concentration of the chemical was 75 pm. It was more effective when applied during anthesis than one week after anthesis.

CPA application regardless of concentration caused the production of pathenocarpic fruits. It did not significantly affect fruit quality in terms of peel color development, firmness, visual quality rating and weight loss.

Submitted

2024-12-04

Published

2007-06-07

How to Cite

Poliquit, R. D., & Diputado Jr, M. T. (2007). Tomato fruit parthenocarpy and yield increase in response to chlorophenoxyacetic acid. Annals of Tropical Research, 29(1), 14–25. https://doi.org/10.32945/atr2912.2007

Issue

Section

Research Article

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