JSTR 2019
DOI: 10.7176/jstr/5-11-12
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Effect of Nitrogen Fertilizers on Yield and Antioxidant Enzymes of Basil (Ocimum basilicum L.) under Water Stress Conditions

Abstract: Water scarcity in Iran has always been a limiting factor for crop and horticultural production. Under these conditions, the nutrient uptake and metabolism processes of plants are different and can reduce growth. To study water stress (at three levels) and six fertilizer regimes (Nitrogen fertilizer requirement by a combination of vermicompost and urea fertilizer) on the quantitative yield of experimental basil (Ocimum basilicum L.). Results showed that water deficit treatment reduced leaf chlorophyll content, … Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(2 citation statements)
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“…Bistgani et al (2018), by fertilizing thyme (Thymus daenensis Celak), observed that EO yield increased 52% in relation to plants cropped without fertilization. In the present study, the results of the treatments T4 (0.53%) and T5 (0.58%) are close to those in the range reported by Rahimi et al (2019); and those EOCs in T4 and T5 increased significantly when compared with T1 (0.28%). Therefore, converting wastewater into irrigation water can represent an alternative to closing the loop for a circular economy.…”
Section: Eoc and Lcsupporting
confidence: 89%
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“…Bistgani et al (2018), by fertilizing thyme (Thymus daenensis Celak), observed that EO yield increased 52% in relation to plants cropped without fertilization. In the present study, the results of the treatments T4 (0.53%) and T5 (0.58%) are close to those in the range reported by Rahimi et al (2019); and those EOCs in T4 and T5 increased significantly when compared with T1 (0.28%). Therefore, converting wastewater into irrigation water can represent an alternative to closing the loop for a circular economy.…”
Section: Eoc and Lcsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…In the present study, EOCs of the four treatments irrigated with RW were 0.36-0.58% (Figure 4(a)). By using chemical fertilizers in different cultivar groups of basil plants, the extraction potential of EO ranged from 0.60 to 1.00% (Rahimi et al 2019). Bistgani et al (2018), by fertilizing thyme (Thymus daenensis Celak), observed that EO yield increased 52% in relation to plants cropped without fertilization.…”
Section: Eoc and Lcmentioning
confidence: 99%