Effects of Different Treatments of Supplemental Light on Tomato
Growth and Fruit
Guangnan Zhang
1,a
, Xiangyun Lou
2,b
, Fei Xie
2,c
and Qiwen Zhong
1, d*
1
Horticultural Research Institute, Qinghai University (Qinghai Academy of Agriculture and Forestry Sciences),
Xining Qinghai, China
2
College of Agriculture and Animal Husbandry, Qinghai University, Xining, Qinghai, China
Keywords:
LED, Tomato, Growth and Development, Fruit Quality.
Abstract:
In exploring the effects of light supplementation measures on the growth and development, yield and quality
of tomatoes, this study used 'Gassina' tomatoes as the test material and set up CK (no light supplementation),
RGB treatment (Red: Green: Blue = 3:1:1, top-lighting), RGB + FR treatment (adding far-red light based on
the RGB treatment, top-lighting), RGB+UV1 treatment (adding ultraviolet light based on the RGB treatment,
filling light from the top), and RGB + UV2 treatment (adding ultraviolet light based on the RGB treatment,
inner-lighting) to analyze the changes of morphological and physiological indices as well as fruit yield and
quality of tomato plants under different fill light treatments. The results showed that the supplemental light
promoted the growth of tomato and improved the yield and quality of tomato. Under different light treatments,
RGB+UV2 interplant supplementation significantly promoted the growth of tomato plants compared with
other treatments, and RGB treatment significantly improved the fruit quality and yield of tomato.
1 INTRODUCTION
The plant growth and development are affected by
light, temperature, humidity, nutrients and other
environmental factors, among which light is one of
the important environmental factors for plant growth
and development. Light provides energy for plant
photosynthesis, and in combination with other
environmental factors regulates plant life activities
such as plant morphogenesis, photoperiodic reactions
and metabolic substance synthesis. Light is also
involved in the entire physiological process of crop
seed germination (Li, 2009), stem and leaf growth
(Liao, 2001), chlorophyll synthesis (Zhang, 2005 ),
induction of flower opening (Wan, 2018; Zhang,
2020) and fruit growth (Qian, 2018), which are
essential environmental factors for plant growth and
development and yield quality formation. Facility
agriculture, also known as environmentally regulated
agriculture, is an artificially created microclimate that
provides suitable environmental conditions for all
stages of vegetable, fruit, flower and other
horticultural products production as well as free from
the constraints of the natural environment. In facility
cultivation, light directly determines the thermal
environment of the greenhouse, thus affecting the
growth and development, yield and quality of the
facility as (Sun, 2014) For sustainable development
and high economic benefits, light quality, light
intensity, and photoperiod are needed to meet the
needs of the crop. However, often in the process of
facility cultivation, covering materials such as plastic
films and insulation facilities, continuous rain and
snow as well as short light hours in winter cause the
phenomenon of light deficiency in facilities, such as
insufficient light intensity and light hours, which
seriously affects the growth and development of
facility crops and high quality and efficient
production, limiting the production potential of
facility agriculture (Hu, 2016; Li, 2020; Choi, 2021).
Greenhouse light environment regulation through
artificial light sources to improve the efficiency of
light utilization by crops has become one of the most
common light environment regulation measures at
present.
At present, the application of artificial light
sources in China's facilities has been very common,
but the late start of facility agriculture in Qinghai
Province, the relative backwardness of the facility
industry, and the slow update of production
technology and supporting facilities. Especially in
winter and spring greenhouse insulation is covered
8
Zhang, G., Lou, X., Xie, F. and Zhong, Q.
Effects of Different Treatments of Supplemental Light on Tomato Growth and Fruit.
DOI: 10.5220/0012000500003625
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Food Science and Biotechnology (FSB 2022), pages 8-13
ISBN: 978-989-758-638-5
Copyright
c
2023 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. Under CC license (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
mostly from 16:00 to 10:00 the next day, the light
intensity and time is seriously insufficient, which
seriously affects the production of winter and spring
facility crops (Ji, 2013). Reasonable light
supplementation measures can meet the
photosynthetic requirements of vegetable crops,
improve the energy utilization efficiency of vegetable
crops, achieve high yield, high efficiency and high
quality production of facility vegetable counter-
seasonal cultivation, and meet the counter-seasonal
vegetable supply in Qingha (Wang, 2019), which is
of great significance for winter-spring facility
vegetable cultivation in the alpine region of Qinghai.
Therefore, in this study we regulated the light
environment of greenhouses in Qinghai plateau based
on artificial supplemental LEDs, and investigated the
effects of LEDs on the growth and development and
quality of tomato plants by using different light
treatments to understand the effects of different
supplemental light measures on tomato growth and
fruit yield and quality in order to improve the yield
and quality of tomatoes and provide technical support
for the cultivation theory of annual production of
facility tomatoes in Qinghai region.
2 MATERIALS AND METHODS
2.1 Experiment Materials
The Glorioso tomato is used throughout the
experiment. The LED bar lights, provided by the
Xiaotaiyang Agriculture High-tech Co., Ltd. in
Zhejiang Province, are adopted as the source of the
supplemental light.
2.2 Experiment Settings
The experiments were carried out in the greenhouse
of the horticultural innovation base of Qinghai
Academy of Agriculture and Forestry Sciences,
Chengbei District, Xining City, Qinghai Province.
The length, span, height, and height of the solar
greenhouse are 40 m, 8 m, 3 m, and 50 cm,
respectively. The covering material of the greenhouse
is po film. Seedlings were raised on February 25,
2020, and seedlings with the same growth were
selected and planted by the trough cultivation in the
solar greenhouse on April 7, 2020. Five lighting
treatments were used in the experiment, which are
denoted as CK (no supplemental light), RGB (Red:
Green: Blue = 3:1:1, top-lighting), RGB + FR (adding
far-red light on the basis of the RGB treatment, top-
lighting), RGB + UV1 (adding ultraviolet light on the
basis of the RGB treatment, top-lighting), and RGB
+ UV2 (adding ultraviolet light on the basis of the
RGB treatment, inner-lighting), respectively. There
are 3 replicates for each treatment, and 15 seedlings
are used in each replicate. The light duration is 5 h
per day, and lighting starts before the open of the heat
preservation quilt (10:00) and ends after the cover of
the heat preservation quilt (16:00). The beginning and
the end of the lighting were controlled by the time
relay.
2.3 Measurement Items and Methods
For each treatment, 6 plants were randomly selected
as sample plants to measure the growth indexes of the
tomato plants and the fruit quality.
Following procedures were used to estimate the
growth indexes of the tomato plants. In detail, the
plant height is measured with a ruler from the plant
rhizome boundary to the plant growth point. The stem
diameter is the averaged value of two measures of the
stem under the cotyledon from two directions by
vernier caliper. The level of Chlorophyll (SPAD
value) is measured by a handheld chlorophyll meter.
The fruit quality is determined by the procedures
described below. The fresh fruit weight is weighed
with a one-tenths balance. The sugar content is
determined by Japan ATAGO digital Brix meter.
Soluble sugar content is quantified by anthrone
colorimetry. The soluble protein is estimated by
Coomassie Brilliant Blue G- 250 staining method.
The content of the organic acid is measured by the
high-performance liquid chromatography method
with the column temperature being 35, the volume
ratio of mobile phases being 9 over 1 between
KH2PO4 and methanol, flow rate being 0.8mL•min-
1, and the sample injection volume being 20 μL. The
composition and content of sugar are estimated by the
high-performance liquid chromatography method.
Specifically, the column temperature is 80. The
water is used as the mobile phase with the flow rate
being 1ml·min-1. The sample injection volume is 5
μL.
2.4 Data Analysis
The basic data were processed and analyzed using
Microsoft Office Excel 2010 software, and statistical
analysis of data was performed using SPSS 26.0
software to determine the significance of differences
between treatments by analysis of variance
(ANOVA), Duncan multiple range test and the
significant tests with the significant level being 0.05.
Origin 2019 was used for graphing.
Effects of Different Treatments of Supplemental Light on Tomato Growth and Fruit
9
3 RESULTS
3.1 Effects of Different Treatments of
Supplemental Light on Tomato
Growth
It can be seen from Table 1 that different
supplemental lighting treatments have different
effects on tomato growth. The plants with the RGB +
UV2 treatment have the highest plant height (324
cm), which was significantly higher than that of the
CK. The plants with other lighting treatments were
higher than that of the CK, but there was no
significant difference among them. The stem
diameter and the number of leaves of the plants with
the RGB + UV2 treatment were highest. But there
was no significant difference compared to that of CK.
Plants with RGB and RGB + FR treatment have the
least number of blades, which are significantly lower
than that of CK. With respect to the pitch, the RGB +
UV1 group takes the largest value. Moreover, the
pitch of the other groups utilizing lighting treatment
is significantly higher than that of CK.
3.2 Effects of Different Treatments of
Supplemental Light on Tomato
Leaves
It can be seen from Table 2 that, the leaf length and
width of the plants with lighting treatments are higher
than that of the groups without supplemental light
(the CK group). While no significant difference is
observed among the groups with lighting. The
chlorophyll level is highest in the RGB group and the
lowest in RGB + FR group. Moreover, no significant
difference is observed among the groups with other
treatments.
3.3 Effects of Different Treatments of
Supplemental Light on Tomato
Fruit Quality
It can be seen from Figure 1 that different
supplemental light treatments do affect the fruit
quality of tomatoes. Except for the fruit from the
plants with RGB + UV2 treatment, the sugar contents
of fruits from the other groups were higher than that
of CK, and the RGB + FR group takes the highest
value of being 6.28 as shown in Figure 1A. The
soluble sugar content of the fruit from the RGB group
Table 1: Effects of different treatments of supplemental light on tomato growth.
Treatment Plant height/cm Stem diameter/mm Internode length/cm
Numbers of
leaf blades
CK 299 ± 22.41b 11.8 ± 0.67ab 7.3 ± 0.67c 45 ± 6ab
RGB 305 ± 4.23b 11.27 ± 0.78ab 8.8 ± 0.55b 39 ± 4c
RGB + FR 302 ± 8.52b 10.99 ± 0.64ab 8.7 ± 0.79b 39 ± 4c
RGB + UV1 301 ± 13.65b 10.83 ± 1.30b 10.1 ± 1.09a 43 ± 4abc
RGB + UV2 324 ± 18.02a 11.96 ± 0.76a 8.4 ± 0.55b 46 ± 1a
Note: CK (no light supplementation), RGB treatment (Red: Green: Blue = 3:1:1, top-lighting), RGB + FR treatment
(adding far-red light based on the RGB treatment, top-lighting), RGB+UV1 treatment (adding ultraviolet light based on the
RGB treatment, filling light from the top), and RGB + UV2 treatment (adding ultraviolet light based on the RGB treatment,
inner-lighting). The data followed by different lower-case letters within the same column are significantly different at 0.05
level. The same as below.
Table 2: Effects of different treatments of supplemental light on Tomato Leaves.
Treatment
Leaf length /cm Leaf width/cm Chlorophyll/SPAD
CK 26.76 ± 3.55ab 25.80 ± 3.23a
34.93 ± 4.77ab
RGB 29.13 ± 3.75ab 25.92 ± 2.46a
39.17 ± 2.10a
RGB + FR 28.37 ± 1.88ab 28.48 ± 4.38a
25.93 ± 6.71c
RGB + UV1 32.29 ± 4.36a 30.12 ± 3.11a
32.94 ± 4.05bc
RGB + UV2 32.23 ± 3.02a 28.48 ± 1.54a
33.42 ± 2.61ab
FSB 2022 - The International Conference on Food Science and Biotechnology
10
Figure 1: Effects of different treatments of supplemental light on tomato fruit quality. A: Sugar degree; B: Soluble sugar
content; C: Soluble protein content; D: Sucrose; E: Glucose; F: Fructose; G: Malic acid; H:Citric acid.
was highest (increased by 58% compared with that of
CK), followed by that of the RGB + UV2 group
(increased by 28% compared with that of CK).
Although the soluble sugar content of other
treatments was higher than that of CK, there was no
significant difference among those groups with
lighting as shown in Figure 1B. The soluble protein
content of fruit under each treatment was increased
by 42%, 28%, 18%, 21% compared with that of CK,
respectively. Except for the RGB treatment, the other
treatments were not significantly different from CK
(Figure 1C). This demonstrates that the supplemental
light treatment can improve the quality of tomatoes.
It can be seen from Figure 1D-F that the glucose
content in tomato fruit is highest, and the sucrose
content is the least. Different supplemental light
treatments have no significant effect on the content of
the sucrose. The glucose content of the RGB + UV2
treatment was significantly higher than that of CK,
and there was no significant difference between other
treatments and CK (Figure 1E). The fructose content
of RGB + UV2 treatment was the highest at
183.1μg/g, followed by RGB + FR treatment, and
RGB + UV1 treatment was the lowest at 151.5 μg/g
(Figure 1F). It can be seen from Figure 1G-H that the
supplemental light treatment can increase the content
of malic acid in tomato fruits, but it is not significant
compared with that of CK. The citric acid content of
RGB + UV1 treatment was the highest at 2415.3
µg/g, followed by RGB + FR at 2090.6 µg/g, and
RGB was the lowest at 1821.9 µg/g.
3.4 Effects of Different Treatments of
Supplemental Light on Tomato
Yield
From Table 3, the following can be observed: (1) the
fruit from the plant with RGB + UV1 treatment has
the largest single fruit weight; (2) the fruit from the
plant with RGB + UV2 treatment has the largest fruit
quantity; (3) the fruit weight of fruit from the plant
with RGB + FR treatment is the smallest, but the fruit
quantity is significantly higher than that of CK. In
other words, the supplemental light treatment can
significantly increase tomato yield. Moreover, the
RGB treatment increases the yield most (increased
41% compared to that of CK), followed by the RGB
+ UV1 strategy (39% higher than that of CK).
Effects of Different Treatments of Supplemental Light on Tomato Growth and Fruit
11
Table 3: Effects of different treatments of supplemental light on tomato yield.
Treatment
Single fruit weight/g Fruit quantity/g Yield/kg
CK 35.09 ± 6.45a 56 ± 10.67b 1965.04 ± 110.5bc
RGB 34.74 ± 7.59a 80 ± 24.83a 2779.2 ± 240.32a
RGB + FR 30.81 ± 4.83a 72 ± 22.03ab 2218.32 ± 300.96b
RGB + UV1 38.87 ± 4.25a 70 ± 15.51ab 2720.9 ± 309.8a
RGB + UV2 30.42 ± 8.81a 88 ± 17.39a 2676.96 ± 350.9a
4 DISCUSSIONS
Plant growth is a quantitative change, which is mainly
manifested by plant height, stem diameter, leaf
growth, etc. When the external light quality or
wavelength is different, the growth effect of the plant
is also different (Xu, 2015). Cui’s research shows that
the red light plays an important role in promoting
stem extension and accumulation of dry matter (Cui,
2009). It can be concluded from Yang's research that
the mixing red and blue light can effectively optimize
tomato leaf structure and chloroplast ultrastructure,
thereby promoting the accumulation of dry matter of
tomato seedlings (Yang, 2018). In this experiment,
different supplemental light treatments can affect the
growth and development of tomatoes. The plant
height, leaf length and width of the plants with all
supplemental light treatments are higher than that of
the plants without lighting, which is consistent with
the results of previous studies. Meanwhile, the
chlorophyll content of the tomato plants with RGB +
FR treatment was significantly lower than that of CK,
and the yield was the lowest among all supplemental
light treatments. This is consistent with the research
results of Huang (Huang, 2017): increasing the ratio
of far-red light will reduce the chlorophyll content
and yield per plant. Plant height, stem diameter,
number of leaves, and leaf area of the plant with the
RGB + UV2 treatment are the highest. This may be
because the inter-lighting supplements the light of the
middle and lower leaves of the plant, which promotes
the photosynthesis of the middle and lower leaves,
and then promotes the growth of the plant (Yan, 2018;
Hovi-Pekkanen T, 2008). The above results
demonstrate that LED supplemental light can
promote the growth of tomatoes, and the combination
of red and blue light can promote the growth of
tomatoes significantly, which is important to promote
the formation of late yield.
The soluble sugar content reflects the metabolic
capacity of the plant and it is one of the main
products of plant photosynthesis metabolism. Light
quality not only affects the growth and development
of tomato plants, but also affects fruit quality
formation (Chen, 2016; Sha, 2021). Ding found that
the mixing red and blue light can significantly
increase the soluble solid content and soluble sugar
content of tomatoes (Ding, 2016). In this experiment,
the soluble sugar and soluble protein of the fruit with
each supplemental light treatment were higher than
that of CK, indicating that the red and blue light can
effectively improve the quality of tomato fruit. The
effect of different light quality on fruit yield is also
very significant. Sun et al. applied the red light and
the mixing red and blue light to tomatoes in the solar
greenhouse, and found that the yield of tomatoes was
significantly increased (Sun, 2014). In this
experiment, the yield of fruits treated with
supplemental light was significantly increased, and
the effect of RGB treatment was the most significant.
The above results demonstrate that red and blue light
mixing can increase the accumulation of sugar
substances in tomato fruits, which has a significant
effect on yield and quality improvement.
However, since this study is the first exploratory
experiment in Qinghai, due to the limited conditions
and relatively simple experimental setup, there are
problems such as relatively few experimental
treatments, a single variety, and fewer measurement
indexes, etc. Moreover, since there are many other
influencing factors in the greenhouse, the final results
may have certain deviations and fail to scientifically
and rationally explain the scientific problems of the
effect of supplemental light on tomato growth and
yield, which is limited. In the future, we will focus on
the scientific aspects of the effects of LED
supplemental lighting on the growth and
development of tomato seedlings and the fruit
formation process during the growth period in
Qinghai.
5 CONCLUSIONS
In summary, different light supplementation
treatments had different effects on tomato growth,
with RGB+UV2 (red: green: blue:
ultraviolet=3:1:1:1) interplant supplementation
FSB 2022 - The International Conference on Food Science and Biotechnology
12
treatment having the most significant effect on
tomato plant growth than the other treatments, and
RGB (red: green: blue=3:1:1) top supplementation
treatment significantly improving tomato fruit quality
and yield. This result can provide a theoretical basis
for green, high yield and high quality cultivation in
Qinghai. This result can provide a theoretical basis
for green, high-yielding and high-quality tomato
cultivation in Qinghai.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This article is the Qinghai Province Science and
Technology Achievement Transformation Special
Project (2020-NK-121), Qinghai Province
Agriculture and Forestry Science Innovation Fund
(2019-NKY-02), Qinghai Province Science and
Technology Department Key Laboratory Project
(2020-ZJ- Y02) One of the phased results.
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