
Suficiência amostral para cravina de jardim cultivada em diferentes substratos
Author(s) -
Sidinei José Lopes,
Marília Milani,
Alessandro Dal ́Col Lúcio,
Lindolfo Storck
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
ornamental horticulture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.274
H-Index - 6
ISSN - 2447-536X
DOI - 10.14295/oh.v22i1.796
Subject(s) - husk , earthworm , horticulture , substrate (aquarium) , mathematics , botany , agronomy , biology , ecology
The cravina is an excellent plant to build up gardens due to its early flowering, abundant flowering and great performance in spring and autumn. The objective was to estimate the sample size for plant chinese pink, grown on different substrates, and check the variability of the sample size between growth parameters and production and substrates. They used seven treatments (substrates): S1 = 50% soil + 50% rice husk ash; S2 = 80% soil + 20% earthworm castings; S3 = 80% rice husk ash + 20% earthworm castings; S4 = 40% soil + 40% rice husk ash + 20% earthworm castings; S5 = 100% peat; S6 = 100% commercial substrate Mecplant®; S7 = 50% peat + 50% rice husk ash, with 56 repetitions each, totaling 392 plants of garden pink, which was evaluated in 17 of growth and production parameters. The methodology used to bootstrap resampling, with replacement, for each character within each substrate with predetermined error: 5, 10, 20 and 40% of the average (D%). To a 95% confidence interval, with D = 20%, the substrate 50% soil and 50% of rice husk ash had the largest sample size 11 characters; when comparing the characters , the number of flower buds had the highest sample size on average 113 plants. Using samples of 44 plant chinese pink for commercial substrate Mecplant® meet the lower precisions or equal to 20% for all variables. There is variation in sample size in relation to the substrate used and the variable evaluated in chinese pink plants.