Curcuma longa, the Golden Revolution in Hydroponic Cultivation
M. Ramanjineyulu *
Department of Agronomy, Sri Krishnadevaraya College of Horticultural Sciences, Ananthapuramu, Andhra Pradesh, India.
M. Sainath Rao
Department of Spices, Plantation, Medicinal & Aromatic Crops, Sri Krishnadevaraya College of Horticulture Sciences, Ananthapuramu, Andhra Pradesh, India.
Manda Prashanth
The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI), New Delhi, India.
G. C. Sravya
Department of Agronomy, Karunya Institute of Technology and Sciences, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India.
M. Rashmitha
Department of Agricultural Economics, University of Agricultural Sciences, Dharwad, Karnataka, India.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Curcuma longa L., the golden spice, is undergoing a major shift with the adoption of hydroponic cultivation, boosting both production efficiency and bioactive compounds. Hydroponics raises curcumin content from the traditional 2–3% to 5–8%, with elite varieties such as Lakadong reaching 7–9%. This review highlights species diversity (C. longa, C. zedoaria, C. aromatica, C. caesia) and evaluates over 20 commercial varieties, including Rajendra Sonia (8.44% curcumin) and geographic indications like Erode and Madras turmeric. India, producing 1.23 million metric tons (about 80% of global output), can achieve 3–4 harvests annually under hydroponics versus a single traditional harvest. Systems offer 80–90% water efficiency, eliminate soil-borne diseases, and deliver up to eightfold yield gains. Controlled environments also support year-round processing and value addition to meet pharmaceutical and nutraceutical demand for high-curcumin extracts. Advanced tools - IoT sensors, AI nutrient management, automated harvesting - further improve sustainability and climate resilience while preserving genetic diversity. Although initial costs are high, economic analyses show return on investment within two to three years, aided by premium pricing and strong export markets worth USD 207.45 million. Hydroponic turmeric thus emerges as a transformative innovation ensuring sustainable resources, enhanced therapeutic compounds, and new paradigms for medicinal plant cultivation.
Keywords: Curcuma longa, hydroponics, medicinal plants, sustainable cultivation and bioactive compounds