Trellising, fruit thinning and defoliation have only small effects on the performance of 'Ruby seedless' grape in Morocco

2003 
SUMMARYThe effects of trellising, thinning and defoliation on growth, yield and fruit composition were investigated in grape (Vitis vinifera L., ‘Ruby Seedless’) in Morocco over two years. Vines were grown on a double tee (DT) or a triple tee (TT) using two or three cross-arms, thinned at fruit set (29 clusters) or not thinned (35 clusters), and defoliated (removal of basal leaves at veraison up to and including the leaf opposite the first retained grape cluster) or left undefoliated. The TT trellis had greater shoot growth, leaf area, and pruning weights than the DT trellis. Twenty per cent of light reached the fruiting zone in both trellis systems. In contrast, average light in this zone ranged from 52 to 969 µmol m-2; s-1 in the defoliated vines compared with 13 to 59 µmol m-2 s-1 in the undefoliated vines. Berries on defoliated vines were up to 6.K warmer than berries on the control vines. Yield per vine was not affected by any of the treatments, with an average yield of 7.53.6.1.85.kg per vine. Avera...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    7
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []