Pepper Crop under Climate Change: Grafting as an Environmental Friendly Strategy
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2018Cita bibliográfica
Penella, C., & Calatayud, A. (2018). Pepper crop under climate change: Grafting as an environmental friendly strategy. In: Shanker, A. (Ed.). Climate Resilient Agriculture: Strategies and Perspectives. (129-155). IntechOpen: London.Resum
Pepper is an extremely important vegetable worldwide in socio-economic terms. However,
persistent land use, monoculture, and intensified production processes have led to soil diseases.
This, along with abiotic stress, and mainly salinity of soil and waters, water stress,
and suboptimal temperatures, can lead to physiological disorders emerging in peppers,
e.g., cracking and Blossom end rot, which induce plant senescence, and lower not only in
yields, but also in product quality. Salinity and water shortage are the two main environmental
problems that crops face in the Mediterranean Region. One way of overcoming
stresses from an ecological or integrated crop management viewpoint is to use grafted
plants as an adaptation strategy. Initially, grafting technology has expanded in Solanaceae
and Cucurbitacea species to overcome biotic stress. Nowadays, grafts are being used
as several approaches to cushion the impact of climate change on agricultural systems.
Furthermore, grafts allow desirable varieties by organoleptic or productivity traits, but
they are sensitive to abiotic stress and can be grown under abiotic stress. As far as we
know, very few studies on grafted pepper plants under abiotic stress are available.