1. Introduction
Lettuce is a globally important crop, with a combined harvest of over 25 million tons in 2016 [
1]. This number has increased steadily since 1995 [
1]. Global production occurs on 1.25 million hectares of agricultural land. The United States is one of the top lettuce producers in the world, coming in second behind mainland China. Lettuce is the third most popular vegetable in the U.S. behind potatoes and tomatoes with an annual consumption of 25.5 pounds per capita per year [
2]. As a cool-weather crop, lettuce has cooler air temperature requirements than some other popular greenhouse crops [
3]. Optimally, day temperatures should be around 23 °C and night temperatures around 17 °C. Bolting begins to be a problem as air temperatures rise and slowing of growth occurs with lower temperatures. Typical growth periods last anywhere from 65 to 80 days in the field, from seed to harvest, for full heads of lettuce during the summer, and up to 130 days during the winter. With this clear seasonal variation, greenhouse growing offers the benefits of stabilized climate and more consistent time to harvest. Beyond climate control, greenhouses also offer the ability to control lighting and shading conditions as well as CO
2 enrichment through the use of shading practices or the addition of supplemental lights [
4].
Daily light integral (DLI) is an important factor to control to achieve consistent growth rates for vegetable production. There is a direct relationship between the amount of light received and dry matter accumulation in lettuce, which makes DLI control relevant to greenhouse lettuce growers. Research into optimal DLI for lettuce production is well established, as much work has been done examining differing light levels. Both et al. determined that the optimal DLI for lettuce sits at 17 mol·m
−2·d
−1 after examining 35 different treatments between 8 and 22 mol·m
−2·d
−1 [
4]. Traditionally high-intensity discharge (HID) fixtures such as high pressure sodium (HPS) or metal halide (MH) have been used for supplemental lighting of lettuce in greenhouses. However, as LED cost decrease and efficacy increases, the adoption of LEDs has become more common.
Light emitting diodes (LEDs) are semiconductors that emit light when an electrical current passes through them. By varying the semiconductor materials used, different spectra (i.e., wavebands) can be obtained. The investigation into the use of LEDs for horticultural applications began in the late 1980s and early 1990s. While early studies were conducted with space-based missions in mind, applications on the ground have become more and more economically feasible as the technology progressed. These early studies involved red-only LEDs but have since developed to encompass a wide array of color capabilities [
5].
With the advancement of LED technology, there are some advantages of LEDs as compared to existing horticultural lights (HPS and metal halide). Examples include photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) efficacy [
6], the ability to target specific wavebands/spectra of light, finer control over light intensity and periodicity of lighting [
7], and a lower heat load produced in the direction of the light allowing them to be placed closer to a crop or operated during warm ambient conditions [
5,
8]. When comparing potential for energy savings in LED over HPS lights the PAR efficacy, light output per unit electricity (units: µmol/j) is used [
9]. However, PAR efficacy only tells us about fixture performance and does not account for plant performance under a lighting source. The biomass efficacy refers to the edible fresh weight or dry weight per unit electricity (units: g/kWh) under a given lighting fixture in a specific crop production environment.
A body of information has begun to develop on impacts of HPS versus LED lighting [
10]. When grown under HPS lamps and LEDs of the same intensities, net photosynthesis was not affected in lettuce [
8]. Regarding morphological effects, under spectrums containing higher percentages of blue and UV light, lettuce heads tend to be more compact but slightly denser [
8]. In red leaf lettuce, the red pigment anthocyanin increases in concentration with greater blue light exposure [
11]. Leaf area and leaf expansion increases under increasing red light exposure [
8]. Some work is currently being done to observe the effects of green light on lettuce and understand the biological mechanisms involved, but as of yet, this system is still not completely understood [
12].
While there has been previous research on the use of LEDs for lettuce, many research projects focus their efforts on a few carefully selected lettuce cultivars in order to observe specific responses in those cultivars. As such, there is not much directly comparable research between multiple cultivars when looking at yield, morphology, and sensory analyses. Though previous research has shown that yield and morphology response to spectral quality in lettuce is highly cultivar dependent, it has not been shown whether those responses remain the same within the same type of cultivar, e.g., all red leaf or romaine lettuce react the same under the same spectral treatments [
8]. Some LEDs on the market now have greater PAR efficacy than HID [
6], but more work is needed to test fixture biomass efficacy, to determine if their adoption will ultimately lead to reduced energy use by the controlled environment agriculture (CEA) industry.
The objectives of this study were to determine the influence of LED and HPS lighting on the yield and morphology of several cultivars of hydroponic lettuce. Finally, we wanted to determine the biomass efficacy of each lighting system. This article contains the cumulative results of two phases of research (each with three crop cycles) to achieve these objectives.
2. Methods and Materials
This project consisted of two separate experimental phases of growth and data collection activities.
Phase 1 growth cycles took place between January and May 2018, and phase 2 growth cycles took place between June and October 2018 in Ithaca, NY (42° N latitude). A 20 channel NFT system (FarmTek, South Windsor, CT, USA) was constructed. The system consisted of 20 nutrient film technique (NFT) channels with alternating plant placement holes, there were 18 per channel with 20.3 cm spacing center to center. This table was split into two 10-chanel tables to separate HPS and LED treatments while maintaining the same nutrient reservoir. The 125-gallon reservoir was prepared with a nutrient solution as described below. The nutrient solution pH and EC were monitored daily and maintained between 5.5 to 6.5 (using 1 M sulfuric acid) and 1.9 and 2.1 dS·m−1 (using the fertilizer recipe described in further detail below. The nutrient solution was prepared with tap water at the beginning of every new production cycle and replaced thereafter every two weeks. Water levels were topped off from municipal tap water once per week to every three days depending on plant age. Prior to transplanting in NFT channels, seeds were sown into 2.5 cm Oasis Horticubes XL (Oasis, Kent, OH, USA) and grown under HPS lamps for approximately 21 days before being moved into the main treatment tables at the fourth leaf.
One table with 10 NFT channels was placed under an array of six 1000-W HPS lights as described in experiment 1. The second table was placed under an array of six LED fixtures (Lumigrow Pro 650e, Emeryville, CA, USA), which were arranged in an identical pattern and height to the HPS, with their intensity adjusted using SmartPAR software (Lumigrow, Emeryville, CA, USA) to match that of the HPS array (180 µmol·m
−2·s
−1). The LEDs were adjusted to a 20% blue, 80% red ratio of light using the SmartPAR software. A daily light integral (DLI) of 17 mol·m
−2·d
−1 was chosen. The daily light integral (DLI) under each array was maintained at 17 mol·m
−2·d
−1 using the Light and Shade System Implementation (LASSI) algorithm [
13]. LASSI is a computer algorithm to control DLI in greenhouses with highly variable ambient light conditions [
13]. Briefly the LASSI algorithm has inputs for: light intensity that is provided by supplemental lights, minimum dark period (if any), day of the year, time of the day, and a running sum of daily PPFD. The algorithm uses the information to make decisions at each time-step (in this experiment, every half-hour) as to whether lights must be turned on now to reach the DLI target or can the lighting decision be delayed until the next time step. The algorithm is dynamic as “the algorithm drew from no historical weather data and received no advance notice of the weather expected for the day.” [
13]. When compared to light threshold strategy (in which lighting decisions are based on instantaneous light levels rather than accumulated light integral), the LASSI algorithm was more accurate at reaching target DLI and exhibited energy savings versus threshold control [
14]. In our experiments, a quantum sensor (LI-190R, LI-COR, Lincoln, NE, USA) to measure photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) was placed at the canopy level at a representative location under each of the two lighting arrays. The quantum sensors were connected to an Arduino/Raspberry Pi combined microcontroller system which logged PPFD and sent values via a wireless internet signal to a separate Raspberry Pi which ran the LASSI algorithm and every half-hour communicated light decisions to the connected to the greenhouse environmental control system (Argus, Montreal, QC, Canada).
Table 1 contains a summary of the average hours per day the light arrays were on for each crop cycle in phase 1 to reach the 17 mol·m
−2·d
−1 DLI target.
A water sample was taken from the tap supplied to the greenhouse range on 14 September 2017, and analyzed by the Cornell Nutrient Analysis Laboratory (Bradfield Hall, Ithaca, NY, USA). Water was analyzed for Al, As, B, Ba, Be, Ca, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, K, Li, Mg, Mn, Mo, Na, P, Pb, S, Si, Sr, V, and Zn. Relevant values are included in
Table 2. Elements that tested under 15 mg/L are omitted from the results analysis. The highest values detected are calcium, sodium, magnesium, and sulfur.
Powdered nutrient salts were that were used included a semi-complete hydroponic fertilizer (Ultrasol 3-15-28 Hydroponic, SQM North America, Atlanta, GA, USA) supplemented with calcium nitrate Calcinite 15.5-0-0, YaraLiva, Tampa, FL, USA) at the label rate of 1.0 g/L Ultrasol 3-5-28 and 0.8 g/L of Calcinite 15.5-0-0.
Table 3 compares the nutrient concentration of Ultrasol plus Calcinite with a modified Sonneveld’s solution typically used by Cornell CEA projects.
Phase 1 consisted of 13 cultivars of lettuce that were grown in each of the three crop cycles. The 13 cultivars were: ‘Rex’, ‘Teodore’, ‘Locarno’, ‘Xandra’, ‘Rouxai’, ‘Big Star’ (referred to as ‘Greenstar’), ‘Rocky Row’, ‘Carmessi’, ‘Crunchita’, ‘Lotus’, ‘Seurat’, ‘Aquino’, and ‘Barlach’. The experiment was arranged as a randomized complete block design with two blocks of 5–6 replicates per cultivars per block per lighting treatment with a total of three production cycles. Due to their large size, the romaine cultivars were spaced to contain one empty plant slot between each head. For all three crop cycles data was collected on lettuce head fresh weight (with head separated from roots just above the NFT channel). In the second replicate, Brix data was collected. In the third replicate, data were also collected on plant height (from the severed base to the highest part of the plant) and width (diameter of the widest part of the plant).
Brix and glucose were recorded in crop cycle two in an attempt to collect some quantitative data which may be associated with flavor. We developed a protocol whereby 2 to 4 recently mature leaves from each lettuce head were placed in a quart-size freezer bag and placed in a freezer (−18 °C) for one week. Once frozen, samples were removed from the freezer, crushed and ground, and allowed to defrost. Juice was allowed to collect in the bags before being read with a handheld refractometer (SIM Supply, Hibbing, MN, USA). Glucose measurements from 159 samples per cultivar were also taken using a One Touch (LifeScan, Inc., Milpitas, CA, USA) blood glucose monitor to measure the same liquid samples used for Brix measurement. The range of the meter used was 0 to 600 mg·L−1. Brix testing was specifically requested by the company sponsors, while glucose was not.
Electrical Efficacy—To estimate the biomass efficacy of each lighting treatment (g edible fresh weight/kWh electricity) we summed the harvestable fresh weight from each treatment and then divided this by estimated electricity consumption. Electricity consumption was estimated by using logged data on the number of hours lighting arrays were on for each crop cycle and multiplying this by the instantaneous electricity use of each array (W). The instantaneous use of each array was estimated by plugging select fixtures into an electricity usage monitor. There are several qualifying statements that need to be made about biomass efficacy estimates. First, it is merely an estimate, as every light was not measured individually to check for electrical usage. Secondly, the HPS bulbs had already been used for several thousand hours while the LED fixtures were new. Third, no effort was made to quantify the amount of unused light lost to the perimeters of the growing area. Nevertheless, we feel studies with food crops and lighting should report biomass efficacy as observed under their experimental conditions.
Due to fairly large plant to plant variability noted in phase 1, we decided to conduct three additional growth cycles with five select cultivars, to allow for more replicates per cultivar per lighting treatment (Phase 2). The three crop cycles took place during June to October 2018, and the crop cycle length was 55, 55, and 53, days for crop cycles 1, 2, and 3, respectively.
Statistical analyses were performed in R (RStudio, Version 1.1.414, the R Foundation) by employing analysis of variance (ANOVA) tables and mixed effect linear models. The experiment was set up in a randomized block design through experiments II and III, with random effects of harvest cycle and block taken into consideration. Fixed effects of light and cultivar, and interactions between light and cultivar, were factored in. After controlling for fixed effects and their interaction, a mean separation comparison was conducted to compare cultivars using a post hoc Tukey’s Honestly Significant Difference (HSD) at α = 0.05.
4. Discussion
Growing lettuce in greenhouses often requires supplemental lighting during off-season production as ambient light levels drop, depending on geographical location of greenhouses. As such, the debate over what type of supplemental lighting to use continues to evolve as technology rapidly changes. Interestingly, in 2014, the electrical efficacy of evaluated LED fixtures was no better than the best HPS fixtures [
15]. However, by 2016, the best evaluated LED fixture was 40% more efficacious than HPS [
6]. Historically, HID fixtures have been used for supplemental lighting, but LED adoption is increasing within the greenhouse industry. A difficulty with LED is the high initial capital investment. In 2014, LED fixtures tended to cost five to 10 times more than HPS [
15]. Earlier studies with HPS and LED have also observed significant energy saving when using HPS over LED lights in the production of lettuce [
10].
The results of this study indicate that similar growth and appearance is achievable through the use of LEDs, which comes with a significant savings in electrical operations cost. Our study found few yield or morphological effects of light source. Martineau et al., found a similar result with Boston lettuce, but there was no inclusion of red leaf cultivars [
10]. This study also combined ambient sunlight with supplemental HPs and LED fixtures, using red and blue LEDs comparable to those used in the current study. Another study published in 2017 compared the differences in growth of one type of green head lettuce grown in the field under different colored shade clothes and did find significant differences between red and blue colors when comparing head weights and diameters [
16]. Lettuce diameter is affected by leaf expansion, and the 2017 study observed greater leaf area and larger diameters under red shade cloths. In the current study only once sample size was increased two-fold did difference begin to become significant: taller and wider heads were observed in several cultivars under HPS lighting as opposed to the LED treatment, which contained a higher proportion of blue light. Though these results were significant, the practical significance with differences of 1–2 cm can be argued.
The relatively minor impact of light treatment in our experiment and those previous may also be because our experiment as in a greenhouse with a background of sunlight. The spectral differences in HPS versus LED fixtures appears to have been minimized by ambient sunlight. It should be noted that as our phase 1 experiment progressed from cycle 1 to cycle 3 less need for supplemental light was required (
Table 1). Therefore, while there was not a statistically significant effect of light source on FW of 12 cultivars, it is possible that if the experiment was conducted only under winter conditions there would be more apparent differences.
Anthocyanin production in response to blue light is a well quantified response in certain lettuce cultivars. Working with red leaf lettuce, Stutte et al. [
11] found that wavelength of light provided in a sole source lighting environment had a dramatic effect on anthocyanin production as well as total plant growth when compared to fluorescent lighting of the same intensity. A red-blue spectrum produced four times as much anthocyanin content as a red spectrum alone, when grown at the same intensities. However, although these are large differences, the work was conducted in growth chambers, under sole-source lighting.
HPS and LED lights have a significant difference in distribution patterns that can make the choice between the two of them very application-dependent. LEDs tend to have a narrower focus in lighting area, better lending them to use in greenhouses that have aisles, benches, or walk ways. HPS lights have a broader distribution, enabling them to better cover wider areas more evenly [
15]. These distribution pattern differences will lead to a difference in hanging distribution of lights and potentially affect the number of lights a grower will need for even coverage. The present study has shown that LEDs can offer a significant savings in electrical consumption while producing the same quality of lettuce, but the grower must still decide if the start-up costs are worth the savings over time. A thorough study of lights required should be conducted for each operation individually.