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Effect of Soil-Applied Humic Amendment on Photosynthesis Rate and Lycopene Content of Tomato Solanum lycopersicum L. Seven Landraces, Involving Newly Characterised ‘Zemplínskyʼ Cover

Effect of Soil-Applied Humic Amendment on Photosynthesis Rate and Lycopene Content of Tomato Solanum lycopersicum L. Seven Landraces, Involving Newly Characterised ‘Zemplínskyʼ

Open Access
|Dec 2025

Abstract

This research aimed to examine the effect of soil improvement based on leonardite on the intensity of photosynthesis and the lycopene content of tomatoes. Seven landraces of Hungarian and Slovakian origin were tested at two sites (Site-1, Site-2) under field conditions in the temperate continental climate of Central Europe. The treatments: (i) NPK nutrition (43.5:30:30 kg/ha NPK), and (ii) HUMAC Agro (HA), with the same nutrition and a soil-applied humic preparation from HUMAC Agro at a dose of 1,500.00 kg/ha. The lycopene content averaged 285.94 mg/kg and ranged from 6.18 to 658.54 mg/kg. The content was mainly influenced by the landraces (F-ratio 70,856.00, P-value 0.00), followed by the treatments (F-ratio 20,189.00, P-value 0.00), then by the sites (F-ratio 16,291.00, P-value 0.00), and finally by the replications (F-ratio 17.62, P-value 0.00). Lycopene orders, by: (i) land-races ‘Cegléd’ < ‘Zemplínsky’ < ‘Máriapócs’ < ‘Fadd’ < ‘Tolna’ ≤ ‘Mátrafüredi’ < ‘Gyöngyös’ (10.83 < 181.47 < 233.85 < 329.36 < 411.93 ≤ 413.293 < 420.85 mg/kg); (ii) treatments HA < NPK (254.96 < 316.92 mg/kg); and (iii) Site-2 < Site-1 (258.11 < 313.77 mg/kg). A phenomenon of harmonising effect of the humic amendment was observed, as the lycopene content changed from the extreme values to the medium values at both sites. Photosynthetic rate (PR) was monitored on Site-1 under two sequences: (i) TS (sequence temperature 20.3 – 41.7°C at constant FAR of 608 mmol/m2/s) and (ii) LS (sequence light/photosynthetically active radiation, FAR 0 – 1,304.00 mmol/m2/s at constant temperature 38.2°C). In both sequences, the higher PR was found in NPK (30.753 and 12.589 mmol/m2/s; LS vs. TS) compared to HA (22.347 and 9.271 mmol/m2/s). This indicates a climatic anti-stress effect of the humic treatment, which is probably related to the better-known effect of humic amendments on plant root improvement.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/agri-2025-0008 | Journal eISSN: 1338-4376 | Journal ISSN: 0551-3677
Language: English
Page range: 78 - 97
Submitted on: Aug 22, 2025
Accepted on: Nov 20, 2025
Published on: Dec 6, 2025
Published by: National Agricultural and Food Centre
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2025 Štefan Tóth, Katarína Klemová, Jozef Fejér, Pavol Porvaz, Michal Procházka, Ivan Kron, published by National Agricultural and Food Centre
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.