Nondestructive Optical Sensing of Flavonols and Chlorophyll
in White Head Cabbage (Brassica oleracea L. var. <i>capitata</i> subvar. <i>alba</i>)
Grown under Different Nitrogen Regimens
posted on 2016-01-13, 00:00authored byGiovanni Agati, Lorenza Tuccio, Barbara Kusznierewicz, Tomasz Chmiel, Agnieszka Bartoszek, Artur Kowalski, Maria Grzegorzewska, Ryszard Kosson, Stanislaw Kaniszewski
A multiparametric
optical sensor was used to nondestructively estimate
phytochemical compounds in white cabbage leaves directly in the field.
An experimental site of 1980 white cabbages (Brassica
oleracea L. var. <i>capitata</i> subvar. <i>alba</i>), under different nitrogen (N) treatments, was mapped
by measuring leaf transmittance and chlorophyll fluorescence screening
in one leaf/cabbage head. The provided indices of flavonols (FLAV)
and chlorophyll (CHL) displayed the opposite response to applied N
rates, decreasing and increasing, respectively. The combined nitrogen
balance index (NBI = CHL/FLAV) calculated was able to discriminate
all of the plots under four N regimens (0, 100, 200, and 400 kg/ha)
and was correlated with the leaf N content determined destructively.
CHL and FLAV were properly calibrated against chlorophyll (<i>R</i><sup>2</sup> = 0.945) and flavonol (<i>R</i><sup>2</sup> = 0.932) leaf contents, respectively, by using a homographic
fit function. The proposed optical sensing of cabbage crops can be
used to estimate the N status of plants and perform precision fertilization
to maintain acceptable crop yield levels and, additionally, to rapidly
detect health-promoting flavonol antioxidants in Brassica plants.