Master intensive strawberry production with plasticulture, tunnel systems, integrated pest management, and commercial-scale techniques for maximum yield and quality.
Dr. Michael Chen
Ph.D. in Plant Sciences from UC Davis. Former extension specialist with 20+ years of agricultural research experience. Specializes in commercial vegetable production and integrated pest management.
Introduction
This advanced guide is for experienced growers ready to implement intensive strawberry production systems. We'll cover plasticulture, protected cultivation, integrated pest management, and the science behind maximizing strawberry yield and quality.
Understanding Strawberry Physiology
Flowering Physiology
Strawberry flowering is controlled by complex interactions:
June-bearing (short-day) types:
- Flower initiation: Days <12-14 hours + cool temps
- Occurs in fall (September-October)
- Flowers emerge following spring
- Long days + warm temps = runner production
Day-neutral types:
- Flower initiation: Independent of day length
- Temperature-dependent: 40-85°F optimal
- Continuous flowering when conditions favorable
- Higher temps favor vegetative growth
Flowering vs. Runnering Trade-off:
- Gibberellin (GA) promotes runner formation
- GA20-oxidase gene controls this balance
- Day-neutral mutants have reduced GA sensitivity
Fruit Development
The strawberry "fruit" is unique:
- Receptacle: The fleshy part we eat (not true fruit)
- Achenes: True fruits (seeds) on surface
- Auxin: From fertilized achenes promotes receptacle growth
Fruit development timeline:
- Pollination triggers auxin production
- Auxin promotes cell division in receptacle (7 days)
- Cell enlargement continues (14+ days)
- Color development and sugar accumulation
- Harvest at full color (variety-dependent)
Pollination requirements:
- Self-pollination: ~53% achene development
- Wind: ~67% achene development
- Insect pollination: ~91% achene development
- Poor pollination = misshapen fruit
Plasticulture Production System
System Overview
| Component | Specification |
|---|---|
| Bed height | 6-8 inches raised |
| Bed width | 24-30 inches on top |
| Between beds | 5-6 feet center to center |
| Mulch type | Black or white plastic |
| Irrigation | Drip tape under plastic |
| Plants/acre | 15,000-20,000 |
Bed Formation
- Shape beds to proper dimensions
- Apply fertilizer based on soil test
- Lay drip tape centered on bed
- Apply plastic mulch
- Cut planting holes 10-14" apart, staggered
Advantages of Plasticulture
| Benefit | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Earlier harvest | Soil warms faster |
| Cleaner fruit | No soil contact |
| Reduced disease | Less splash; drier foliage |
| Weed control | Physical barrier |
| Water efficiency | Reduced evaporation |
| Higher yields | 30-50% increase typical |
Plastic Color Selection
| Color | Effect | Best Use |
|---|---|---|
| Black | Maximum soil warming | Cool climates; early season |
| White | Reflects light; cooler soil | Hot climates; warm season |
| Silver/metallic | Repels aphids | Virus-prone areas |
| Red | May increase yield | Experimental |
Protected Cultivation
Low Tunnel Systems
| Specification | Details |
|---|---|
| Height | 2-3 feet |
| Width | Covers single bed |
| Material | 1.5 mil clear poly |
| Support | Wire hoops every 4 feet |
Management:
- Ventilate when >80°F inside
- Remove or open ends for bee access
- Control humidity to prevent disease
- Remove for harvest
High Tunnel (Hoop House) Production
| Advantage | Details |
|---|---|
| Season extension | 4-6 weeks earlier; 4-6 weeks later |
| Rain protection | Reduces Botrytis dramatically |
| Temperature control | +20-30°F minimum |
| Year-round potential | With heating in mild climates |
Management considerations:
- Ventilation critical (disease prevention)
- Irrigation essential (no rain)
- Pollination (bumble bee hives)
- Pest monitoring (can build up)
Substrate Culture (Tabletop)
Growing strawberries in containers on raised tables:
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Container type | Grow bags, troughs, or pots |
| Substrate | Coco coir, perlite, or mixes |
| Fertigation | Complete nutrient solution |
| Advantages | Ergonomic; disease reduction; year-round |
Integrated Pest Management
Scouting Protocols
Weekly monitoring checklist:
- Spider mite damage (stippling, webbing)
- Aphid colonies (undersides of leaves)
- Thrips damage (bronzing, scarring)
- Tarnished plant bug (deformed fruit)
- Disease symptoms (leaf spots, rot)
Thresholds:
| Pest | Action Threshold |
|---|---|
| Spider mites | 5 mites/leaflet; presence of webbing |
| Aphids | 5-10% of plants infested |
| Thrips | 5-10 per flower |
| Tarnished plant bug | 1 per 4 plants (fruit set) |
Biological Control Programs
Spider mites:
| Agent | Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Phytoseiulus persimilis | 2-5/m² | Hot spot release |
| Neoseiulus californicus | 5-10/m² | Preventive |
| Combined release | Best results | Complementary action |
Aphids:
| Agent | Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Aphidius colemani | 0.5-1/m² weekly | Parasitic wasp |
| Chrysoperla carnea | 1-5 larvae/m² | Lacewing; excellent control |
| Ladybugs | Release at infestation | Short-term |
Thrips:
| Agent | Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Amblyseius cucumeris | 50-100/m² | Preventive |
| Orius insidiosus | 1-2/m² | Predatory bug |
Disease Management Protocols
Botrytis (Gray Mold):
| Strategy | Implementation |
|---|---|
| Cultural | Air circulation; remove debris |
| Biological | Bacillus subtilis, Trichoderma |
| Chemical | Rotate FRAC groups (7, 11, 17) |
| Timing | Begin at 10% bloom |
Anthracnose:
| Strategy | Implementation |
|---|---|
| Prevention | Clean stock; resistant varieties |
| Cultural | Avoid overhead irrigation |
| Chemical | Captan, Pristine, Switch |
| Note | FRAC 11 resistance widespread |
Phytophthora:
| Strategy | Implementation |
|---|---|
| Prevention | Good drainage; raised beds |
| Resistant varieties | Albion, San Andreas |
| Chemical | Phosphorous acid products |
| Biological | Trichoderma species |
Fertility Management
Nutrient Uptake Patterns
| Growth Stage | N | P | K | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Establishment | Low | High | Medium | Root development |
| Vegetative | High | Medium | Medium | Leaf growth |
| Flowering | Medium | Medium | High | Fruit quality |
| Fruiting | Medium | Low | High | Sugar accumulation |
Fertigation Programs
Plasticulture fertigation (ppm):
| Stage | N | P | K | Ca | Mg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Planting | 25 | 15 | 25 | 50 | 20 |
| Vegetative | 75 | 25 | 75 | 100 | 30 |
| Flowering | 100 | 30 | 150 | 150 | 40 |
| Fruiting | 75 | 20 | 175 | 150 | 40 |
Foliar Nutrition
| Nutrient | Application | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Calcium | Weekly during fruiting | Firmness; tip burn prevention |
| Boron | At flowering | Fruit set; quality |
| Iron | If deficient | Chlorosis correction |
Harvest and Post-Harvest
Harvest Quality Standards
| Grade | Criteria |
|---|---|
| US No. 1 | Full color; firm; well-formed |
| US No. 2 | 3/4 color minimum; minor defects |
| Reject | Mold; damage; poor color |
Harvest Operations
Timing:
- Morning harvest after dew dries
- Avoid mid-day heat
- Every 1-3 days at peak
Technique:
- Leave 1/4" stem attached
- Handle by stem, not fruit
- Place in shallow containers
- Don't stack more than 3-4 deep
Post-Harvest Handling
Critical temperatures:
| Stage | Temperature | Humidity |
|---|---|---|
| Field heat removal | Cool to 32-34°F within 1 hour | 90-95% |
| Storage | 32°F (0°C) | 90-95% |
| Transport | 32-36°F | High |
Cooling methods:
| Method | Cooling Time | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Forced air | 45-90 minutes | Preferred |
| Room cooling | 6-12 hours | Slower; less effective |
| Hydrocooling | 15-30 minutes | Risk of disease |
Storage life:
- Optimal conditions: 7-10 days
- Each hour delay in cooling = 1 day less shelf life
Record Keeping and Analysis
Production Records
Track per variety/block:
- Planting date and source
- Environmental conditions
- Pest/disease pressure
- Input costs (labor, materials)
- Harvest dates, yields, grades
- Post-harvest losses
Economic Analysis
| Input | Cost Range (per acre) |
|---|---|
| Plants | $2,000-4,000 |
| Plastic/mulch | $500-1,000 |
| Irrigation | $500-1,500 |
| Fertilizer | $300-600 |
| Pest management | $500-1,500 |
| Labor (harvest) | $3,000-8,000 |
| Total | $6,800-16,600 |
| Output | Value |
|---|---|
| Yield (good) | 15,000-25,000 lbs/acre |
| Price range | $1.50-4.00/lb |
| Gross revenue | $22,500-100,000/acre |
Conclusion
Advanced strawberry production combines understanding of plant physiology, intensive growing systems, and rigorous pest management. Whether using plasticulture, tunnels, or substrate culture, the principles remain consistent: optimize growing conditions, prevent problems before they start, and handle fruit with care post-harvest.
Ready for more? Our Expert Guide covers genetics, breeding, and the latest scientific research on strawberry production.
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