Artículo de revista
Transpiration-use efficiency of young cactus pear plants (Opuntia ficus-indica L.)
Fecha
2021Registro en:
Int. J. Agric. Nat. Resour. 48(2):115-124. 2021
10.7764/ijanr.v48i2.2255
Autor
Kremer Fariña, Cristian Eduardo
Faúndez, Carlos
Beyá Marshall, Víctor Manuel
Franck Berger, Nicolas Walter
Muñoz Aravena, Victor Manuel
Institución
Resumen
C. Kremer, C. Faúndez, V. Beyá-Marshall, N. Franck, and V. Muñoz-Aravena. 2021.
Transpiration-use efficiency of young cactus pear plants (Opuntia ficus-indica L.). Int. J.
Agric. Nat. Resour. 115-124. Opuntia ficus-indica is a versatile crop that is resilient to drought,
making it perfect for semiarid to arid zones. However, the lack of knowledge associated with
its benefits and the lack of simple crop growth simulation models to determine its potential
development, among others, has prevented its expansion. Transpiration-use efficiency (w)
has been used to evaluate crop performance under different water supplies; however, the lack
of consistency in w values under different environmental conditions has impeded its use as
a transferable parameter. To overcome this problem, w is estimated through the normalized
water-use efficiency (kDa) and the vapor pressure deficit (Da) as w = kDa Da
-1, where kDa is a
crop-dependent parameter. Therefore, the goals of this research were (i) to determine w and kDa
in young plants of Opuntia ficus-indica and (ii) to compare the obtained parameters with values
from other species. The w and kDa results were 18.57 (g kg-1) and 6.48 (g kPa kg-1), respectively.
Here, w was more than two to six times the value for traditional cereals (maize, rice, wheat),
while kDa was larger than that of most C3 crops and fell in the range for C4 and CAM crops. This
is the first study that explicitly determines kDa for Opuntia ficus-indica; hence, more research
should be carried out on its estimation, including under different agroclimatic conditions and in
later stages of development. As a first approximation, the parameters obtained here can be used
as a simple model to estimate yield projections of Opuntia ficus-indica.