OSU Extension Bi-Weekly Fruit & Vegetable Report – September 15th, 2023

The OSU Extension Fruit & Vegetable Report is written/published collectively by OSU Extension staff across the state. 

View a recording of the OSU Extension Bi-Weekly Fruit & Vegetable Report updates below:

Farm Science Review 2023

The Farm Science Review (FSR) is one of the nation’s premier farm shows and one of OSU Extension’s largest, most far-reaching educational programs. The event will be held at the Molly Caren Agricultural Center near London, Ohio on September 19th – 21st. The OSU Extension Fruit & Vegetable Team will be hosting a tent all 3 days that will feature presentations from academic and industry speakers on a variety of topics, including nutrient management, entomophagy, integrated pest management, variety trial results, farm marketing, and more. The OSU Extension Fruits & Vegetables exhibit will be located near the gazebo near the Utzinger Garden (booth 385). We hope to see you there!

Check out the 2023 Farm Science Review Program for further information.

Speaker schedule for OSU Extension Fruits & Vegetables exhibit at FSR 2023. Note: There will also be a presentation by Dr. Marne Titchnell, Extension Wildlife Program Director for OSU,  on wildlife management in fruits & vegetables on Wednesday, September 20th from 1:30 – 2:00 PM.

Purple carrot-seed moth detection

The OSU Plant & Pest Diagnostic Clinic (PPDC) recently received an insect sample that was identified to be purple carrot-seed moth (Depressaria depressana), a known pest of crops in the Apiaceae family. This was the first report of purple carrot-seed moth found in Ohio, though it has been found in neighboring states. The insect feeds on the flower heads of crops like carrot, parsnip, dill, celery, parsley, and more, but it is yet unknown if it will be an economically important pest of these crops in Ohio. Check out the article from PPDC for more information.

Please report any suspected larvae/adults with pictures to entomology@osu.edu or ppdc@osu.edu.

Purple carrot seed moth larvae (top) and adult (bottom). Photo by Iowa State University Extension (top) and University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Entomology (bottom). 

Crop updates

Vegetables

Cucurbits

Downy mildew continues to wreak havoc in cucurbit plantings this time of year. As a refresher, here is a factsheet from Michigan State University on downy mildew mitigation. Powdery mildew pressure is reported to be increasing in southern Ohio. Striped cucumber beetles populations are declining in central/northeast Ohio and transitioning more towards higher numbers of corn rootworm beetles. Western corn rootworm, a look-alike of striped cucumber beetle, also feeds on cucurbits and can impact yield if heavy populations are present. Check out this article from Iowa State University for information on identifying different rootworm beetle pests. 

Virus symptoms are being observed in some melon plantings. There are various aphid-vectored potyviruses that affect cucurbits and they can be hard to differentiate from one another, though control practices are similar for all of them. The big 4 for cucurbit crops are cucumber mosaic virus, papaya ring spot virus, watermelon mosaic virus, and zucchini yellow mosaic virus. Like many crop diseases, management practices are preventative and include using resistant varieties or planting earlier to ensure harvest before viral symptoms appear towards the end of the season. Getting aphids under control may also minimize virus infection to some degree.

Cucumber mosaic virus – symptoms include yellowish-green “mosaic” mottling on foliage or fruit and crinkled leaves. Photo by Gerald Holmes, Strawberry Center, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, Bugwood.org.

Papaya ringspot virus – symptoms include wrinkled leaves and discolored, bumpy fruit. Photo by Mary Ann Hansen, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Bugwood.org.

 

Watermelon mosaic virus – symptoms include wrinkled leaves and geometric patterns on fruit.  Photo by Dorina Pitorac, European Plant Protection Organization.

Zucchini yellow mosaic virus – symptoms include blistered, wrinkled leaves and fruit with discolored bumps. Photo by University of Massachusetts Extension.

Fruiting Vegetables

Late-season aphid feeding is being observed in some solanaceous crops. Honeydew is a sugary liquid secreted by aphids and other sap-sucking insects (whiteflies, spotted lanternfly, etc.). Honeydew accumulation on crop foliage or fruit can lead to growth of sooty mold, which is a term for various genera of fungi that colonize the sticky exudate. Sooty mold does not render vegetables inedible, however, and can be readily washed off. 

Honeydew from aphids (and other sap-suckers) on plant leaves is sticky to the touch and can be colonized by sooty mold. Photos by Kansas State University Entomology (top) and Joe Boggs, the Ohio State University Extension (bottom). 

Regular bouts of rainfall as we head into the fall are leading to increased incidence of Phytophthora infection in peppers (and cucurbits). While excess water is a problem for some vegetable growers in Ohio, some parts of western Ohio still remain abnormally dry, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. Mites have been a problem in some areas, while thrips have taken a downturn. Keeping mites under control towards the end of the season can reduce the chance of heavy pressure next season by reducing the egg load/number of overwintering adults that will become next year’s mite infestations.

Fruit

Tree fruits

Early varieties of apples are being harvested across the state. Brown marmorated stinkbug pressure is increasing. Bitter rot is starting to be observed in some orchards. Marssonina leaf blotch is also being seen in some organic orchards, where management can be difficult without the use of fungicides. Removal/destruction of leaves on the orchard floor in the fall can reduce overwintering sites for the pathogen. Black knot is being seen on some ornamental plum trees, so commercial plum and cherry growers should keep an eye out for black knot galls on their trees and promptly remove them if they see them.

Gall of black knot (Apiosporina morbosa), a fungal pathogen of plum, cherry, and other types of fruit trees. Photo by Joseph O Brien, USDA Forest Service, Bugwood.org.

Small Fruits

Preparing Brambles for Winter – Sanitation Practices for Disease Prevention
Melanie Ivey, State Fruit Pathologist and Fresh Produce Safety Specialist, The Ohio State University

Disease management of perennial fruit crops is a year-round endeavor. Many fungal pathogens survive the winter months in the soil or plant debris, infected canes or buds, or dead canes. As part of an integrated disease management program fall sanitation practices to reduce inoculum in the planting should be done.  Best sanitation practices include removing floricanes after harvest, removing diseased and dead canes, removing dead or systemically infected plants, and raking or chopping fallen leaves. Pruning debris should be destroyed by burning or placing in the trash or discarding it away from the planting. Diseased plant material should not be composted.  Pruning cuts should be sharp and clean to avoid unnecessary mechanical wounds.

The fall is also a good time to scout for and remove wild bramble populations that are near the production field. In addition to fall sanitation practices, some diseases require a dormant or delayed dormant fungicide application. For dormant or delayed dormant fungicide recommendations consult the Midwest Fruit Pest Management Guide (OSU Extension Bulletin 506).

The table below summarizes where the fungi for several common diseases of brambles in Ohio overwinter, the recommended fall sanitation practices for each disease, and whether a dormant or delayed dormant fungicide application is recommended.

Upcoming Events: 

September 19 – 21, Farm Science Review

September 27, Wooster, OH, Midwest Mechanical Weed Control Field Day

September 30, Albany, OH OEFFA CSA Veggie Farm Tour

December 5th – 7th, Grand Rapids, MI, Great Lakes Fruit, Vegetable, & Farm Market Expo 

January 15 – 16, Columbus, OH, 2024 Ohio Produce Network

February 15 – 17, Newark, OH, 2024 Ohio Ecological Food and Farm Association (OEFFA) Conference

“Can I …?”, “What about …?”: Farmers Improving Their and Other Farms through Research

The season for field days, crop walks, twilight tours, tailgate chats, blog posts, phone calls from the field, and other ways to share and receive input is underway, and the goal is always the same – learn, and improve farm operations in some way. On-farm research contributes much to that learning and improvement process. That message has been driven home to my team and me many times through our years of working closely with vegetable growers in designing, completing, and summarizing and sharing findings from on-farm research they and we completed. The same message was also highlighted in a recent conversation among farmers, researchers, and educators (view/listen at https://www.youtube.com/@OSU-organic).

For background, the OSU Organic Food and Farming and Education and Research Program (https://offer.osu.edu/home) hosts monthly online discussions focused on recent, on-going, or future research pertinent to Ohio organic production. Participants include farmers, researchers, and educators and many comments also inform and are informed by experiences with conventional production. Recordings of the meetings are available at the YouTube channel URL above.

The conversation on July 7 featured a presentation by Stefan Gailans from Practical Farmers of Iowa (PFI). Stefan leads PFI’s Cooperators’ Program (https://practicalfarmers.org/programs/farmer-led-research/cooperators-program/), where he helps farmers turn their research ideas into relevant and shareable knowledge. Information from Stefan’s presentation is below but taking in the entire presentation and follow-up discussion is encouraged (see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DpVAdWGG0w0).

1. PFI (https://practicalfarmers.org/), OEFFA (https://grow.oeffa.org/), and OPGMA (https://www.opgma.org/) have similar goals.

2. The PFI Cooperators’ Program helps farmers learn from each other through farmer-led on-farm investigation and information sharing.

3. The PFI Cooperators’ Program is a community of curious, creative farmers including scientific methods in how they improve their farms. Their investigations (e.g., paired trials) inform their decisions. The process involves putting ideas and farm practices to the test using simple but effective scientific methods. Intentional observation focused on what the farmer is keen to learn about and important to them is the foundation of the process.

4. Many questions are often straightforward “A versus B” or “yes versus no” types. Investigating them often leads to a-ha moments and other more complicated questions. A-ha moments can also reveal that some (new) practices reduce other costs, providing indirect but real benefits.

5. Asking “Can I …?” or “What about …?” and completing an investigation relies on curiosity, creativity, and commitment because extra work is required. Farmers receive a small stipend through program sponsors.

6. Farmer participants can discover that on-farm research helps them “train their eye” and look for or pay attention to other things then ask questions about them. They also become better able to evaluate other peoples’ research and its findings, allowing them to select and use information from industry, university, and other sources more effectively.

Comment from a PFI Cooperators’ Program participant.

7. The program is not all about only the investigations. Much effort is also put in to ensuring that lessons and findings reach other farmers through programs, publications, and YouTube videos offered on an ongoing basis.

8. About the 2022 research program –

(a) seventy-five trials were led by forty-five farmers.

(b) Most farmers had at least eleven years of farming experience and most of them took part primarily to improve their production.

(c) 88% of trials spurred new ideas or other observations. Seventy-six percent of participants reported a moderate to very large change in knowledge after completing a trial. Fifty-four percent of participants reported they will make a change on their farm following their trial but 22% said they would not make a change. Both outcomes are productive because they represent learning and increased confidence in decision-making.

It is never too late or early to start investigating a question important to you using on-farm research. If needed, consider connecting with another farmer, member of industry, or research-extension person familiar with the process.

Optimize Potato Seeding Depth and Hill Management for Your Varieties, Soils, and Markets

As a potato grower, the number, size, shape, and color of the tubers you dig at harvest affect your income. These four characteristics are influenced by how deep seed tubers or pieces were placed at planting and the width and height of the hill created and maintained from planting to crop maturity. This article provides examples of how seed depth and hill size and shape affect tuber yield and quality. Given these examples and other information, growers may wish to evaluate their variety-specific seed placement and hilling operations, particularly because stolon or tuber initiation is underway in many area potato plantings.

1. The plant genetics factor. Tubers form at the tips of stolons which arise from the stem(s) developing from the seed piece or tuber. Most stolons extend from points on stems above the seed piece/tuber, although stolon tips may reach below it. Similarly, the number of stolons most likely to develop on a plant and, therefore, its tuber yield potential, tends to differ among varieties. Once initiated, stolon length can vary with growing conditions, leading hills to hold few to many generally tightly or loosely bunched tubers. Carefully hand-digging young plants to examine their stolons and newly initiated tubers and completing test digs at various stages of tuber development is very informative. The combination of stolon number and length and growing conditions shapes tuber characteristics. Optimal planting depths and hill conditions maximize tuber yield and quality. Proper hilling increases the volume of soil available for light-free tuber development and can assist with weed control.

2. The soils factor. Regardless of seed depth, stems and young plants must develop before stolons and tubers can, so promoting rapid, high, and uniform emergence is key. Warm, loose/friable soil with the optimal level of moisture promotes grower-friendly stand establishment, a foundation for large, high-quality crops. Of course, what is required to maintain those soil conditions planting through stand establishment and tuber initiation and development differs by soil type (especially texture), at minimum. Indeed, research and experience have shown that optimizing seeding depths and hilling operations requires adjusting them for coarse-to-fine textured soils and varieties used in specific fresh and processing markets. Reviewing reliable resources and completing on-farm tests will help determine the seeding depths and timing, intensity (e.g., amount of foliage buried), and number of hilling operations that are optimal for your operation, given the major soil-variety/market combinations you work with.

3. The market factor. Individual fresh (tablestock) and processing (e.g., potato chip) markets require tubers with many specific characteristics. Tuber number, color (greening), shape, size distribution, and specific gravity are among the market traits that can be influenced by seed depth and hilling operations — i.e., seed depth and hilling as they interact with and are influenced by soil and other conditions. Taken together, plant genetic, soil, and market factors explain why planting depths and hilling regimes should be tailored to the operation and adjusted within and across seasons as varieties, as soils and markets require. Currently, potato seed in Ohio and the region is often placed 4-8 inches deep in single-row hills which are reshaped once or twice after emergence while vines remain mostly upright. Approximately 20-30 percent of the visible foliage or rosette is buried at each hilling. Burying a large percentage of foliage at any time or hilling after vines “flop” and begin to close rows can be damaging. Similarly, hilling under conditions that may promote compaction or interfere with further vine or tuber development is also counterproductive.

Growers, Grafters, Researchers, and Extension Partner in Identifying Best Management Practices for Grafted Vegetable Plants – Watermelon in Ohio in 2023

Many growers know that grafting gives them access to much needed disease resistance – stronger resistance to some diseases than available in hybrids and more resistances than often found in them, too. Indeed, a quick scan of rootstock characteristics at http://www.vegetablegrafting.org/resources/rootstock-tables/ reveals that few commercial hybrid varieties of tomato or watermelon include some resistances found in rootstocks. However, the greater cost of grafted plants has many people asking how growers’ profits can be maximized when using them. Lowering costs and boosting yield and quality are key parts of the answer.

Best Management Practices (BMPs) are “how-to” guides used in commercial crop production. BMPs are developed over years of collaboration involving many people since they involve optimizing every aspect of individual production systems from site and variety selection through post-harvest handling, packaging, and delivery. Current vegetable BMPs are based on the use of nongrafted plants. However, grafted plants tend to be more vigorous than and different from nongrafted ones in other ways. More important, perhaps because of these differences, grower and researcher experience with grafted vegetable plants indicates that farm BMPs must be updated to lower the costs and maximize the grower profits associated with using grafted plants. Optimizing plant density (number of plants per acre based on in- and between-row spacing), and irrigation, fertility, and harvest management for many scion-rootstock combinations has become the focus of much on-farm and on-station research.

Four Ohio farms, The OSU North Central Agricultural Research Station (https://oardc.osu.edu/facility/north-central-agricultural-research-station), and OSUE will evaluate the effects of plant density using four scion-rootstock combinations in 2023. Drawing on previous work (e.g., https://u.osu.edu/vegnetnews/2021/08/21/grafted-watermelon-plants-under-what-conditions-and-practices-does-using-them-offer-the-best-return-on-investment/), plants provided by Tri-Hishtil of Mills River, NC (https://www.trihishtil.com/) will be set at a range of in- and between-row spacings affecting potential grower costs and, possibly, fruit maturation, yield, and/or quality. Within and across sites, the total plant population is expected to equal roughly 450 – 1,450 plants per acre in individual plots. The team is intrigued by the possibility that yield and quality will remain high in some treatments/plots although many fewer plants, rows, and various inputs will have been used.

We would like to hear from you if you have questions about making and/or using grafted vegetable plants or information on the topic. Please contact Matt Kleinhenz (kleinhenz.1@osu.edu; 330.263.3810).

Successful Production Begins with the Best Varieties: An Example from Potato Breeding

If you grow potatoes for profit, chances are you rely on varieties developed by a university-USDA-industry team dedicated to improving your success by improving the varieties available to you. This article outlines aspects of that process and The OSU’s participation in it in 2023, as in more than fifty previous years.

The overwhelming majority of potato varieties used in Ohio and the U.S. are developed by university- and USDA-based programs and teams. These teams are led by breeders-geneticists and include plant pathologists, entomologists, food scientists, horticulturalists, and others working closely with growers, grower organizations, processors, retailers, seed certification programs, and members of industry and government. The small number of teams in the U.S. are based in major production regions, e.g., Northwest North-central, and East, allowing them to develop varieties best suited to these regions. The OSU has cooperated with the Eastern team with breeding programs in Maine, New York, and North Carolina and partners in other states for more than fifty years (see https://neproject.medius.re/ and potato reports at https://u.osu.edu/vegprolab/technical-reports/). The OSU also collaborated with the North-central team with breeding programs in Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and North Dakota for more than forty years. Regardless of team, working from industry and consumer input, our goal has been to improve marketable yield regardless of production constraints (e.g., disease, nematode, abiotic stress), tuber quality (including sensory properties and nutritional value), crop use of natural resources (e.g., water, fertilizer) and other characteristics. Efforts completed here continue to benefit growers, processors, retailers, chefs, consumers, and others in Ohio and throughout the Eastern U.S.

Potatoes are clonally propagated – i.e., tubers are clones of their mother plant. This means that increasing the availability of seed for a new superior variety can be more straightforward than in crops requiring true botanical seed. However, in its early stages, potato breeding requires creating and evaluating experimental lines resulting from ‘hybridizing’ crosses, e.g., as in tomato variety development. Many crosses are unproductive while others result in experimental lines worthy of additional evaluation under a wide range of conditions. That is when a network of collaborating evaluators operating in various environments where the experimental line/new variety could be grown commercially becomes essential.

In 2023, The OSU will evaluate 126 experimental selections against 12 standard varieties. As before, selections from the University of Maine, Cornell University, USDA-ARS in Maine, and North Carolina State University will be featured and our evaluation process will focus on the interests of growers, processors, retailers, chefs, and consumers. Plots are located at the OSU-Wooster/OARDC and can be viewed anytime. If possible, please contact Matt Kleinhenz ahead of time so he can welcome you properly and help you benefit fully from the tour (kleinhenz.1@osu.edu, 330.263.3810). Also, seed is available to growers who wish to evaluate experimental selections on their farms.

A subset of the information that will be collected for each experimental line through November-2023 is listed below.

Before Harvest
1. Percent stand (# seed pieces planted versus number of plants established)
2. Plant maturity
3. Tuber bulking period
After Harvest
4. Total yield
5. Percent tubers greater and less than 2 inch in diameter
6. Percent of tubers that are misshapen or have a similar market defect
7. Basic tuber characteristics (9 options for each of the following six characteristics – 531,441 possible combinations!): a) skin color, b) skin texture, c) shape, d) flesh color, e) eye depth, and f) uniformity
8. Tuber internal quality (incidence of defects)
9. Specific gravity
10. Chip quality (color, blister), including as chipped directly after harvest or storage (with or without reconditioning). Chip-stock production in Ohio is mainly for situations in which crops are chipped directly after harvest with no storage period.

Regardless of market, on all but a small set of operations, potato vines are removed before harvest either mechanically (quickly) or chemically (slowly). How vines are removed is important to growers and all members of the potato value chain. They all want tubers well suited to a specific end use; however, some varieties may respond less desirably to quick, mechanical vine killing, especially if vines have not died naturally or are not actively senescing. Applying a desiccant that kills the vines slowly and promotes tuber skin set and stolon detachment is most common. However, some growers may choose or be required to harvest crops “green,” when vines have not died or have been chopped very recently, a typical approach to mechanical vine killing. Importantly, vine killing methodology can affect the condition of the tubers at harvest and after, during processing, storage, shipment, and preparation. Killing vines quickly and harvesting soon after can influence various tuber properties including: a) stolon attachment, b) skin integrity/scuffing, c) physical damage, d) relative abundance of starch versus reducing sugars, e) incidence of bruises, and f) storability. Buyer and grower tolerances for these issues can be low so identifying lines capable of being harvested “green” and used effectively can be important. Of course, some consumers prefer small “new” tubers with very thin skins so these crops must be handled carefully. Similarly, growers and processors are also keen to discover the optimal storage conditions for experimental lines and new varieties and the extent to which their tubers must be “reconditioned” before use as referenced in https://www.potatogrower.com/2019/03/top-5-factors-to-successful. Through the years, once popular processing varieties were displaced by new ones with less stringent storage-reconditioning requirements, a discovery made during collaborative testing by variety development teams and industry.

As always, the 126 experimental lines will also be evaluated for their resistances to multiple diseases, nematodes, and insect pests by other team members in Maine, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, North Carolina, and Florida. Cooking and consumer evaluation tests will be completed.

Information that will be collected before and after harvest is key because plant and tuber characteristics and yield strongly help determine the main end use and market for which a variety is best suited: a) general fresh market, b) specialty fresh market, c) processing (e.g., chip), or d) fresh-processing dual purpose. Of course, this also means the same variety profile also determines which farms and farmers will benefit most from using a new variety. Production for chip and direct-retail markets has increased in Ohio in recent years.

As shown earlier (see https://u.osu.edu/vegnetnews/2023/03/11/how-will-your-yield-and-efficiency-increase-this-season/), U.S. potato yields have climbed steadily for more than a century. This increase is due to better varieties and crop management. Regardless of your market, if potatoes are part of your business, it can be essential to watch for and test new varieties since they provide the greatest reward for your high-level skill as a grower. As much as possible, take advantage of that skill by using superior varieties instead of relying on it to overcome weaknesses of inferior ones. Future related articles will provide information specific to obtaining seed for new or “alternative” varieties that may benefit your business.

Maintaining Soil Productivity/Health in High Tunnels: What’s the Problem?

Soil health or productivity is important to all growers who rely on soil. This is very clear to high tunnel growers who, by definition, have covered a piece of ground with a structure they look to rely on in many ways and must also maintain. Natural forces working on the soils and the general nature of many high tunnel cropping programs can make it difficult to maintain the health or productivity of the soils involved. Click on the “video seed” below for a perspective on the big question of high tunnel soil productivity — what can go wrong and components of a productivity/health maintenance program.

Plant Biostimulants: What They Are and Including Them in Your Cropping Toolbox

Plant biostimulants are a large, diverse, popular, and enigmatic category of inputs. Many growers rely on them while others are skeptical. Most agree that more farmer-friendly information is needed to help ensure growers receive consistent and adequate returns on their investments in plant biostimulants. Click on the “video seed” below to refresh your understanding of plant biostimulants or help become more familiar with them as you consider their possible role on your farm.

Efficient and Effective Management of High Tunnel Environments, 2: Ventilation Status

Growers use high tunnels (HTs) specifically to create environments near their crops that would be unavailable otherwise. Those environments can be very beneficial but difficult to achieve and maintain during many cropping periods. This article summarizes key observations about the challenges and opportunities presented to growers when setting the ventilation status of their HT(s).

HTs are essentially square or rectangular boxes with sides, ends, and, occasionally, tops that can be closed or partially to fully opened. The combined relative positions of a HT’s sidewall curtains, end wall doors, and end wall and/or ridge vents (if present) comprise its ventilation status. Farming inside this box, HT growers must use its ventilation status to manage key conditions inside it (e.g., temperature, relative humidity, air movement/exchange). This process is the HT grower’s opportunity and challenge. Setting the ventilation status is an opportunity because it allows the grower to respond to changing external conditions in their attempt to maintain target conditions inside the HT. Setting the ventilation status is difficult because it can demand large amounts of time, energy, and other resources and create questions and stress.

For example, while many vents operate automatically on temperature-sensitive pistons or controls, they generally do not take wind, rain, or other factors that may influence the grower’s interests into account. Also, very important, opening and closing end wall doors and sidewall curtains is typically done manually. Dynamic weather conditions and specific crop needs may then require repeated trips to the HT(s) to change ventilation status, robbing time and energy from other activities and costing fuel, etc. Further, once at the HT(s), there is the question as to what the ventilation status should be. Answering that question can be very difficult. Consider that the relative positions of two sidewall curtains and two sets of end wall doors represents eighty-one combinations at 0%, 50%, and 100% open for each (3x3x3x3=81) and a more realistic use of these four options at five positions each represents 625 combinations. Adding two end wall vents at three positions each to this list brings the total number of possible ventilation status positions to 5,625 (625x3x3). When growers consider tunnel compass orientation, outdoor temperature, wind speed and direction, sunlight and cloud cover levels, crop needs, that relatively small differences in ventilation status can have large effects on conditions inside the HT (e.g., https://u.osu.edu/vegnetnews/2023/02/11/efficient-and-effective-management-of-high-tunnel-environments-1-the-need-and-challenge/), and other factors, selecting the most sensible ventilation status understandably becomes important and potentially difficult.

Some growers simplify by setting a “compromise” status at some point each day or night and moving on, unable or unwilling to change the ventilation status more frequently and, thereby, possibly exposing crops to non-optimal conditions as outside conditions change. Stress created by that scenario has been clear to me in conversations with growers and it appears to be increasing as weather patterns become more dynamic and extreme.

We partner with growers, the research-extension community, and members of industry to improve growers’ success and efficiency at managing conditions inside their HTs, especially through setting their ventilation status. Participation in the Ohio Controlled Environment Agricultural Center and local to international professional working groups and recent support from the USDA-Ohio Department of Agriculture Specialty Crop Block Grant Competition (“Advancing High Tunnel Production: Research-based Support and Technologies to Speed and Enhance Grower Success”) assist in that process. Please contact Matt Kleinhenz (kleinhenz.1@osu.edu; 330.263.3810) for more information.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Efficient and Effective Management of High Tunnel Environments, 1: The Need and Challenge

Growers use high tunnels (HTs) specifically to create environments near their crops that would be unavailable otherwise. Those environments can be very beneficial but difficult to achieve and maintain during many cropping periods. This article summarizes three key observations about monitoring and managing HT environments gleaned from farmers, researchers, and year-round experience with multiple high tunnels at the research station in Wooster, OH since 2003.

1. Change is constant. As many experienced HT users know and new users discover quickly, HT environments can fluctuate a lot over short (minutes-hours) and longer (days-weeks) periods of time, especially during spring and fall. These fluctuations arise from natural conditions outside the HT and the HT user’s management of the structure. Regardless, severe or repeated fluctuations may disrupt crop development and/or lower crop yield and/or quality.

2. Multiple steps and tactics are needed to achieve desired outcomes. Positioning sidewalls, doors, and vents based on external conditions, crop needs, and other factors is the most common approach to managing these fluctuations and maintaining target air temperature, relative humidity, and other conditions in the HT. Actively heating the air and/or soil, shading the HT, circulating air inside the HT with fans, and other steps are also sometimes used. While some HT growers heat air in the HT, especially early in tomato production, fewer appear to monitor HT soil temperature, which also influences crop development and yield potential. Temperatures shown in the graph below are from unheated HTs and they make us wonder about the impact of heating air in a HT on soil temperature. Note that soil temperatures reached optimal levels long after planting.

More research is needed to determine the effect of heating air in HTs on soil temperature, given that most HTs are surrounded by cold soil, experience short, sometimes cloudy days, and are irrigated with cold water in late winter/early spring. Some of these dynamics are depicted in the drawing below.

 

3. HT environments respond to management, but in incompletely understood ways. Most commercial HTs, especially single bay ones, are rectangles (longer than wide) while multi-bay HTs may approach being square in shape. Regardless, inside, crops differ in height, timing, density, environmental requirements, and position relative to an end- or sidewall. This increases the importance of managing temperature and other conditions in the HT using specific combinations of door and sidewall position, perhaps especially for single bay HTs.

We work to help HT growers be more efficient and effective at managing their HT environments. Our approach involves interlocking steps. For example, we continuously record environmental conditions inside and outside of many HTs along with the positions of their endwalls, sidewalls, and vents. Next, we examine relationships among the: a) external conditions, b) sidewall, endwall, and vent positions, and c) internal conditions. Then, we analyze the status of those three factors alongside cropping outcomes (yield and quality). The overall approach is depicted in the graphic below. In time, we are optimistic this approach will help HT users predict and manage HT environments and crops more effectively.

 

Finally, weather in Wooster, OH on February 11, 2023, was clear, cold, and calm — ideal for illustrating messages outlined above. Note below how temperatures inside five high tunnels tracked sunlight, outside temperature, and endwall position. Even small differences in the amount one endwall was open influenced internal temperatures. Two important lessons can be taken from the numbers. First, similarly small changes in the position of another end- or sidewall are likely to have much larger effects on internal conditions. Second, effects of small differences in internal conditions created by small changes in ventilation status are likely to be cumulative. That is, relatively small differences in temperature like shown below on any given day are less important than those same differences repeated day after day and season after season. Since those cumulative differences are mostly set by growers’ approaches and management options, enhancing those approaches and options is key. Future articles in this series will focus on those topics. Contact Matt Kleinhenz (kleinhenz.1@osu.edu; 330.263.3810) for more information.

Environmental Conditions In and Immediately Outside Five High Tunnels in Wooster, OH on 2/11/23.

 

time 1 2 3 4 5 outside wind (mph/dir.) light (W/m2)
——— air temperature in deg F ———–
midnight 27.0 26.6 25.5 27.2 27.0 29.4 11.5/NW 0
7:35 AM* 17.4 18.1 17.8 18.9 19.9 22.5 5.7/NNW 8
8:35 AM 23.0 30.5 44.0 37.1 40.1 26.7 5.7/NNW 156
9:35 AM 39.8 50.6 64.0 50.7 60.0 33.6 5.7/N 314
vent note A B C D
10:35 AM 63.0 62.6 79.7 67.4 63.0 35.2 4.6/N 466
11:35 AM 78.2 72.3 83.3 74.3 68.2 36.2 4.6/N 546
12:35 PM 86.6 80.3 92.2 79.7 69.4 39.4 3.4/W 583
vent note E F
1:35 PM 86.7 80.8 85.7 77.4 76.5 38.4 5.7/SE 562
2:35 PM 84.3 83.9 83.5 75.2 74.3 39.1 5.7/W 488
3:35 PM 83.1 79.9 84.9 77.4 68.9 43.0 5.7/WSW 369
4:35 PM 56.9 54.5 53.7 52.5 50.3 39.9 3.4/SW 147
5:35 PM** 45.2 43.6 39.8 42.3 41.2 37.6 4.7/SW 28
9:35 PM 28.9 28.9 26.4 29.1 29.0 32.7 3.4/SW 1

*, ** sunrise and sunset in Wooster, OH on Feb 11, 2023 occurred at 7:37 AM and 5:57 PM, respectively.

Note 1.
All high tunnels are single-layer, gothic-shaped, unheated, and located at https://www.google.com/maps/@40.7739922,-81.9150824,574m/data=!3m1!1e3?hl=en. HTs 1 and 2 are 30 ft w x 80 ft long and oriented with their long axis east-west. HTs 3, 4, and 5 are 21 ft w x 48 ft long and oriented with their long axis north-south. All HTs have 2 sliding doors measuring 4 ft w x 8 ft h. When both doors are fully open, the opening created is 8 ft w x 8 ft h.
Note 2. During the time period above, all HTs (doors, sidewalls, vents) are closed unless indicated by a “vent note” below.
A. Sidewalls, doors, and vents closed until 9:51 AM. At 9:51 AM, east end doors open 2 ft (of 8).
B. Sidewalls, doors, and vents closed until 9:51 AM. At 9:55 AM, east end doors open 4ft (of 8).
C. Sidewalls and doors closed. At 10:14 AM, 16-ft2 opening in sidewall at SE corner at endwall-sidewall junction closed (small section of plastic had been released at top of sidewall by camlock failure during recent windstorm).
D. Sidewalls and doors closed until 10:02 AM. At 10:02 AM, north end doors open 4ft (of 8).
E. Sidewalls and doors closed until 12:42 PM. At 12:45 PM, north end doors open 4ft (of 8).
F. Sidewall and door positions unchanged 10:02 AM – 12:45 PM. At 12:45 PM, north end doors reduced to open 2 ft (of 8).

Fruit and Vegetable Production: What’s Next with Consumers, Technology, and More?

The International Fresh Produce Association (https://www.freshproduce.com/) was formed in January 2022 to “speak with a unified, authoritative voice, demonstrate its relevance to the world at large, advocate for members’ interests, and unleash a new understanding of fresh produce.” IFPA advocates, connects, and guides to enhance the prosperity of its members. IFPA membership is large and diverse and IFPA actions and resources can affect and inform growers of all types.

Dr. Max Teplitski is an OSU graduate and the Chief Science Officer of the IFPA. Dr. Chieri Kubota of HCS (https://hcs.osu.edu/) and the OSU Controlled Environment Agriculture Center (https://ohceac.osu.edu/) arranged for Dr. Teplitski to visit with OSU faculty and administration on Nov 4th. He also delivered a presentation outlining research expected to help ensure a sustainable future for the fresh produce industry. Areas of research he outlined were informed by intense evaluation of consumer groups and various trends across the U.S., Europe, and other locations.

Dr. Teplitski highlighted data and information that help explain current and emerging consumer interests. Like growers, the IFPA is interested in what is selling now and what is most likely to sell later. With that in mind, Dr. Teplitski’s summary included many important take-home messages for growers and others, but two messages will be emphasized here. First, recent analysis by IFPA and its partners revealed that consumers cited product quality, price, and nutritional value as their top three considerations when purchasing fresh fruits and vegetables. Interestingly, sustainability-related factors such as environmental impact or recyclable or reusable packaging showed up as consumer demands but not drivers of their purchases. In this analysis, consumers appeared to indicate: (a) that they assume growers and others are operating in a sustainability-driven framework, so (b) focus on other considerations, including quality, price, and nutritional value. This does not reduce the potential importance of sustainability-related factors. In fact, it may signal that consumers expect them to be an industry standard – i.e., in place before consumers begin to separate products based on their other characteristics. Growers may be helped in adjusting to this development by, for example, retailers that look to preferentially source produce from suppliers who use integrated pest management and other sustainability-oriented approaches.

A second message that stood out in Dr. Teplitski’s presentation related to: (a) the increasing consumer acceptance of novel (e.g., tasteful, colorful, pest/disease and stress resistant) varieties developed through bioengineering and gene editing and (b) technologies and systems that enhance the digitization of the industry. Growers familiar with the initial introduction of “GMO” fruits and vegetables years ago may recall their relatively weak acceptance in many markets. The pendulum has not swung entirely toward acceptance. However, use and presentation (labeling) of these genetic technologies is improving, and consumer acceptance appears to be following. This trend has the potential to benefit growers, consumers, and others. Further strategic digitization will have the same impacts. Fruit and vegetable production is a numbers-driven business throughout the value chain, from input supplies and farms to plates. Having and being able to integrate and use key weather, soil, crop, market, and other data will impact day to day and season to season practices.

Stay tuned to updates from IFPA and other member-led organizations working on behalf of their members, consumers, researchers and educators, and others.