New Promising F1 Tomato Hybrids

  • Kulikov Yu. A. Candidate of Agricultural Sciences, Senior Researcher, Institute of Horticulture of the Ukrainian Academy of Agrarian Sciences
  • Erezhepova G. T. Candidate of Agricultural Sciences, Head of the Department of Fruit Growing, Vegetable Growing and Melon Growing, Karakalpak Institute of Agriculture and Agrotechnology, Nukus
  • Khudoyan O. A. Student of the Karakalpak Institute of Agriculture and Agricultural Technology, Nukus
Keywords: heterotic hybrid, film greenhouse, climate, yield

Abstract

Providing the population with fresh vegetables and the vegetable processing industry with vegetable raw materials is possible with a significant increase in the volume of vegetable production both in open ground and in closed cultivation structures (greenhouses, greenhouses, tunnels, etc.). In this case, the main emphasis should be on reducing the costs of manual labor and energy resources, that is, reducing the cost of vegetable products. Consequently, the main way to achieve these goals is to increase productivity and reduce labor and energy intensity of production. One of the stages to achieve the above is the introduction into production of modern heterotic tomato hybrids that meet the requirements of producers, namely high-yielding, resistant to biotic and abiotic factors with high stability and plasticity [1,2].

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

1. Jones, J. Benton, Hydroponics : a practical guide for the soilless grower / J. Benton Jones, Jr. — 2nd ed.2005, p.439
2. Morgan, L., 2003d, Hydroponic tomatoes: the complete guide to soilless success — Part1: tomato plant physiology, The Growing Edge 14(6):56–57.
3. Guidelines for studying and maintaining the world collection of vegetable nightshade crops (tomato, pepper, eggplant). – L., VIR., 1977. – 369 p.
4. Dospehov B. A. Methodology of field experience. – M.: Agropromizdat, 1985. – 350 р.
Published
2023-11-10
How to Cite
Kulikov Yu. A., Erezhepova G. T., & Khudoyan O. A. (2023). New Promising F1 Tomato Hybrids. Central Asian Journal of Theoretical and Applied Science, 4(11), 64-65. Retrieved from https://cajotas.centralasianstudies.org/index.php/CAJOTAS/article/view/1336