The Protected environment Flashcards
The Protected Environment
Protected cropping is the use of a structure to influence the environmental conditions so that negative aspects are reduced and positive factors enhanced.
Sustainability and Environmental Impact of Protected Cropping
Protected cropping allows out-of-season production reducing the need for imported produce and associated transport effects and costs.
Manufacture of materials and structures to protect crops requires the use of much energy and often oil-based products e.g. plastics, glass, concrete, etc.
The environment created by structures is not necessarily attractive to wildlife.
The visual impact of protected cropping structures may not be positive.
Different Structures
Structures used to protect plants usually consist of a framework supporting a transparent material or cladding. Such structures can be large enough to walk inside or they may protect an area maintained from outside the structure.
Examples include: Greenhouses, Polytunnels, Conservatories. Frames, Cloches (low polythene tunnels, units, individual e.g. bottles), Cupboard Frames
Factors Affecting Plant Growth Changed by Protected Growing
The growth of plants under protection is affected by two main factors: the properties of the transparent material and the fact that the growing space is enclosed. They do this by influencing the following:
1) Light
2) Carbon Dioxide
3) Temperature
4) Air movement
5) Relative Humidity
6) Pests and Diseases
Factors Affecting Plant Growth Changed by Protected Growing
- Light
Structures reduce the amount of light reaching the plants inside with shading, reflection and the amount transmitted.
The ‘quality’ of the light is also altered – that is, the proportions of different wavelengths are changed.
These in turn have an influence on the rate of photosynthesis and certain morphological changes.
Sunlight entering a structure will also affect the temperature.
Factors Affecting Plant Growth Changed by Protected Growing
- Carbon Dioxide
The level of CO2 in a closed environment will often drop below that of the outside during the day. This will reduce the rate of photosynthesis.
Similarly, it can be affected by having a still layer of air outside the stomata, particularly in bright sunlight.
Carbon dioxide levels are affected, therefore, by air movement.
Factors Affecting Plant Growth Changed by Protected Growing
- Temp.
Temperature increases in protective structures due to the change in sunlight: from shorter to longer wavelengths once inside. These wavelengths cannot escape and this radiant heat raises the temperature compared to outside.
At colder times of the year, the temperature improvement has a considerable effect on plant growth.
Factors Affecting Plant Growth Changed by Protected Growing
- Air movement
With little air exchange with the outside, CO2 levels can become depleted, reducing the rate of photosynthesis. Humidity will increase and as a result cooling by transpiration is reduced and leaf temperatures can increase substantially.
Plants inside a structure are subject to less turbulent conditions than those outside and the temperature is able to rise.
Factors Affecting Plant Growth Changed by Protected Growing
- Relative Humidity
Humidity often increases in a closed structure. This reduces transpiration which itself reduces water stress. However, too little transpiration can mean there is no cooling effect in very hot conditions and the uptake of nutrients may also be affected.
High humidity may also increase the incidence of some fungal diseases.
Factors Affecting Plant Growth Changed by Protected Growing
- P&D
Certain conditions (warmth and humidity) can increase pests (reproduction rates of insects feeding on plants is increased with the increase in temperature) and diseases (fungal diseases spread faster) but the structure itself may exclude the arrival of spores or pests. For example, a closed structure can prevent access to flying insects.
Structural and Cladding Materials
Greenhouses, Polytunnels, Frames and Cloches all have a framework upon which clear sheet material (cladding) is fixed or held
Steel - (used for some greenhouses, polytunnel hoops, the wire hoops of low, polythene cloches) Very strong, heavy / solid, long-lasting, little maintenance. Cold, bulky (= shade cast), expensive, may become rusty if galvanising deteriorates, heavy (problematic in construction or subsidence).
Aluminium - (greenhouses, frames) Light, quite cheap, no maintenance, long lasting. Can distort, not as strong, issues of sustainability.
Wood - (greenhouses, frames) Warm, aesthetically pleasing, renewable, potentially sustainable, easy to attach fixings. May require maintenance / can rot, bulky, expensive.
Plastic - (frames, ‘water-pipe’ hoops of cloches) Cheap, colourful(?), light, low maintenance. Prone to deterioration / short life, nasty, weak, can crack, oil-based product.
Structural and Cladding Materials
Cladding is the transparent material used to influence the environment in protected environments
Glass - (greenhouses, frames, cloches) Easy to clean, good transparency, long-lasting, no discolouring, retains heat quite well. Breaks, heavy, requires strong structure, quite expensive.
Polyethylene Film / Polythene - (polytunnels, cloches) Cheap, flexible, quick to fit. Can deteriorate due to chemical sprays, can rip, short life span, may need skills to fit.
Polycarbonate - (greenhouses, frames, possibly cloches) Insulating (upto 45% cost reduction), rigid, safe, easy to cut, light, hail and vandal-proof, up to 20 yrs life. Quite expensive, can discolour, easy to scratch.
Acrylic - (greenhouses) Rigid, curved panels possible, light, safe. Discolours, easily scratched, expensive.
Controlling protected environment - Light
Light transmission into a structure is affected by a number of factors.
- The shape of the structure. Angled panes of glass or rounded structures allow more light to enter.
- The site. Nearby structures must be at least 4 times their height distance away to minimise shading.
- The orientation. An E-W orientation transmits more light in the winter: this is when light is possibly the factor limiting growth.
- The cladding material and its condition. Glass and plastics have various light transmissions complicated by changes in opacity with time (including scratches) with plastics and the build-up of dirt and algal growth.
Given a particular shape and structure, how much light a plant receives can be manipulated in a number of ways.
Shading
This can be reduced by using a wider spacing of plants, particularly in the winter when light is at a premium.
Artificial shading can be used to reduce light, specifically, or as a side-effect of reducing the temperature. Often reduction is by 40-50%: cacti and succulents require little or no shading whilst ferns might need a 75% reduction.
- Washes: painted or sprayed on at the beginning of summer and cleaned off at the end. Inexpensive. Some types become more transparent when wet (i.e. lets in more light on cloudy/wet days. Messy.
- Blinds: provide adjustable shading, usually on the outside of a structure. Manual types need constant attention whilst automatic types are more convenient but expensive. Are often used to adjust daylength and so influence flowering e.g. Euphorbia pulcherrima (Poinsettia).
- Shading material: flexible mesh or woven materials. Usually fixed in place inside or out.
Lighting Equipment
Occasionally artificial light is the sole source for some plants e.g. specialist propagation units.
Usually, artificial light is supplementary: a top-up to winter or spring daylight either at either end of the day or during. Very useful with seedlings early in the year when many plants can be illuminated in a small area. Often used in conjunction with additional heating. Leads to a faster growth rate and better quality, sturdier plants.
The type of light has a bearing on which wavelengths are emitted and the quantity of each wavelength. Not all wavelengths are useful to plants. The most common bulbs in use are high-pressure sodium, fluorescent, compact fluorescent and LED. Different bulbs have different longevity, efficiency, output and cost.
Controlling protected environment - Temp
Structures will, by themselves, raise the temperature inside by protection from wind chill, greenhouse effect, etc. This may be enough for some plants to maintain growth. Others will need to be frost free and some will be damaged even when the temperature is above freezing, like tomatoes, peppers, Saintpaulia, etc. In some cases, the temperature will get too high.
The temperature can be reduced using shading and ventilation.
Ventilation: the area covered by ventilators should be at least one sixth of the floor area. The principle behind ventilation is that warm, humid air is replaced by fresh air by:
- creating openings through which air can circulate. These should be staggered to ensure as much air circulation throughout the structure as possible. These could simply be lifting part of a structure as with cloches and frames, opening doors as in polytunnels or opening hinged vents and louvre ventilators in the walls or roofs of greenhouses. Relies on external air movement / wind or the ‘chimney effect’.
- using automated equipment to optimise the timing of ventilation. This includes automatic vent openers and extractor fans. The latter are usually set in the top of a greenhouse and a hinged louvre located at the bottom of the opposite wall to ensure maximum air movement.
The temperature can be raised or maintained using insulation or heating.
Insulation: usually used in conjunction with additional heating to reduce costs. The higher the temperature to be maintained, and the colder the region, the more cost-effective insulation is likely to be.
- double-glazing: very effective but expensive.
- plastic insulation: single sheets do not cut out much light but are not as effective as bubble plastic which consists of double or triple skins of transparent plastic with air cells in between.
- thermal screens: sheets of plastic or translucent material are drawn, like a curtain, across a structure to compartmentalise it or are drawn horizontally on wires across a greenhouse at eaves height in the evening. This reduces the volume requiring heating or insulating.
Heating: most protective structures are ‘cold’ i.e. unheated. However, in certain circumstances, some heating may be required, whether to raise the temperature to tropical conditions or just keep the space frost-free.
- in small structures, like cold frames, under soil heating cables can be used. These warm the whole structure but particularly the root zone so are useful for striking cuttings.
- Electric heaters: usually thermostatically controlled meaning heat is not wasted. Combined with fans these can also promote good air circulation and distribution of the warmth. Problems include installing an electricity supply, safety problems and the relatively low fuel efficiency of electricity.
- Gas heaters: from mains or bottled gas these have good fuel efficiency, can operate in isolation and may have a thermostat. However, bottled gas can run out and propane releases fumes and water vapour.
- Paraffin heaters: cheap to install, these heaters can work in the absence of mains connections. The lack of thermostats means they may be expensive to run. Also, water vapour and some plant-toxic fumes may be produced in combustion, fuel has to be transported and stored and maintenance is required (to check fuel levels and wick).
- Hot water pipes: old fashioned method involving a boiler and cast iron pipes. Modern versions.
- Hot beds: microbial activity in O.M. heats a heap and a frame set on top.
Controlling protected environment - Humidity
The humidity – the amount of water vapour in the air – will affect the rate of transpiration. How plants react to different levels of humidity depends on the species. With some, a very high humidity will mean that low transpiration rates will not be present to cool the leaves and prevent damage from overheating. In other species, particularly tropical ones, a high humidity is essential to survive since they are not adapted to preventing the water loss that will occur in a dry atmosphere.
Warm air is capable of holding more moisture than cold air before it becomes saturated. Relative humidity describes the amount of water in the air as a % of the amount at saturation point for that temperature: the RH could be 50% at one temperature but there will be a lot more moisture in the atmosphere than an RH of 50% at a lower temperature. Most greenhouse plants benefit from an RH of between 75% and 40%. At levels above 80% Botrytis and Mildew can become a problem.
Humidity is reduced by ventilation.
It may be increased using various techniques: watering the floor and staging (‘damping down’) increases humidity.
Automatic spray systems can be used for plants that require very high and even humidity levels, also for cuttings.
Hand mist sprayers and water-filled trays will raise the humidity.