Unraveling the Role of Red:Blue LED Lights on Resource Use Efficiency and Nutritional Properties of Indoor Grown Sweet Basil

Indoor plant cultivation can result in significantly improved resource use efficiency (surface, water, and nutrients) as compared to traditional growing systems, but illumination costs are still high. LEDs (light emitting diodes) are gaining attention for indoor cultivation because of their ability...

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Published inFrontiers in plant science Vol. 10; p. 305
Main Authors Pennisi, Giuseppina, Blasioli, Sonia, Cellini, Antonio, Maia, Lorenzo, Crepaldi, Andrea, Braschi, Ilaria, Spinelli, Francesco, Nicola, Silvana, Fernandez, Juan A., Stanghellini, Cecilia, Marcelis, Leo F. M., Orsini, Francesco, Gianquinto, Giorgio
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 13.03.2019
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Summary:Indoor plant cultivation can result in significantly improved resource use efficiency (surface, water, and nutrients) as compared to traditional growing systems, but illumination costs are still high. LEDs (light emitting diodes) are gaining attention for indoor cultivation because of their ability to provide light of different spectra. In the light spectrum, red and blue regions are often considered the major plants' energy sources for photosynthetic CO assimilation. This study aims at identifying the role played by red:blue (R:B) ratio on the resource use efficiency of indoor basil cultivation, linking the physiological response to light to changes in yield and nutritional properties. Basil plants were cultivated in growth chambers under five LED light regimens characterized by different R:B ratios ranging from 0.5 to 4 (respectively, RB , RB , RB , RB , and RB ), using fluorescent lamps as control (CK ). A photosynthetic photon flux density of 215 μmol m s was provided for 16 h per day. The greatest biomass production was associated with LED lighting as compared with fluorescent lamp. Despite a reduction in both stomatal conductance and PSII quantum efficiency, adoption of RB resulted in higher yield and chlorophyll content, leading to improved use efficiency for water and energy. Antioxidant activity followed a spectral-response function, with optimum associated with RB . A low RB ratio (0.5) reduced the relative content of several volatiles, as compared to CK and RB ≥ 2. Moreover, mineral leaf concentration (g g DW) and total content in plant (g plant ) were influences by light quality, resulting in greater N, P, K, Ca, Mg, and Fe accumulation in plants cultivated with RB . Contrarily, nutrient use efficiency was increased in RB ≤ 1. From this study it can be concluded that a RB ratio of 3 provides optimal growing conditions for indoor cultivation of basil, fostering improved performances in terms of growth, physiological and metabolic functions, and resources use efficiency.
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Reviewed by: Karl-Johan Bergstrand, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden; Valerie Gravel, McGill University, Canada
This article was submitted to Crop and Product Physiology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Plant Science
Edited by: Martine Dorais, Laval University, Canada
ISSN:1664-462X
1664-462X
DOI:10.3389/fpls.2019.00305