Row orientation effects on potted-vines performance and water-use efficiency

The relation between water-use and intercepted solar radiation depends on many factors involved in vine canopy architecture and physiology. In addition, vine productivity is related to the efficiency with which the intercepted photosynthetically active radiation (IPAR) is used, which in turn depends...

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Main Authors: Buesa, Ignacio, Miras-Ávalos, José M., Intrigliolo, Diego S.
Format: article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/6670
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0168192320302501
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author Buesa, Ignacio
Miras-Ávalos, José M.
Intrigliolo, Diego S.
author_browse Buesa, Ignacio
Intrigliolo, Diego S.
Miras-Ávalos, José M.
author_facet Buesa, Ignacio
Miras-Ávalos, José M.
Intrigliolo, Diego S.
author_sort Buesa, Ignacio
collection ReDivia
description The relation between water-use and intercepted solar radiation depends on many factors involved in vine canopy architecture and physiology. In addition, vine productivity is related to the efficiency with which the intercepted photosynthetically active radiation (IPAR) is used, which in turn depends mainly on water availability and transport. In hedgerow-managed vines it exists the possibility to modulate IPAR by orienting their rows, influencing water-use efficiency (WUE), defined as dry matter produced by water used. Aiming to unravel the effects of row orientation on WUE, a three-year experiment was carried out in Valencia (Spain) on potted Vitis vinifera (L.) cv. Bobal and Verdejo with vine rows oriented either north-south (NS) or east-west (EW), under no-water restrictions. Simulated radiation interception over the growing seasons at the experimental plot showed an average 39% reduction in daily IPAR when EW was compared to NS. Vine transpiration was quantified by water balance, decreasing by 16% in Bobal and 8% in Verdejo when comparing EW against NS. In both cultivars, this reduction was 18% when considered relative to the total leaf area. Carbon assimilation was not markedly affected by row orientation. Therefore, since in both cultivars minor differences in vine performance occurred between orientations, WUE tended to increase by orienting the rows to the EW compared to NS. This resulted in most of the seasons an increase in water productivity calculated as grape yield/water-use ratio. Leaf gas exchange measurements partially agreed with the radiation interception simulations, suggesting a more complex regulatory mechanism and highlighting the importance of canopy microclimatic conditions in the physiological processes of hedgerow-managed crops. These findings encourage further research under field conditions and different soil water availabilities, aiming to optimize grapevine water productivity
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institution Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Agrarias (IVIA)
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spelling ReDivia66702025-04-25T14:47:36Z Row orientation effects on potted-vines performance and water-use efficiency Buesa, Ignacio Miras-Ávalos, José M. Intrigliolo, Diego S. Canopy sunlight interception Hedgerow F06 Irrigation Vitis vinifera Water productivity The relation between water-use and intercepted solar radiation depends on many factors involved in vine canopy architecture and physiology. In addition, vine productivity is related to the efficiency with which the intercepted photosynthetically active radiation (IPAR) is used, which in turn depends mainly on water availability and transport. In hedgerow-managed vines it exists the possibility to modulate IPAR by orienting their rows, influencing water-use efficiency (WUE), defined as dry matter produced by water used. Aiming to unravel the effects of row orientation on WUE, a three-year experiment was carried out in Valencia (Spain) on potted Vitis vinifera (L.) cv. Bobal and Verdejo with vine rows oriented either north-south (NS) or east-west (EW), under no-water restrictions. Simulated radiation interception over the growing seasons at the experimental plot showed an average 39% reduction in daily IPAR when EW was compared to NS. Vine transpiration was quantified by water balance, decreasing by 16% in Bobal and 8% in Verdejo when comparing EW against NS. In both cultivars, this reduction was 18% when considered relative to the total leaf area. Carbon assimilation was not markedly affected by row orientation. Therefore, since in both cultivars minor differences in vine performance occurred between orientations, WUE tended to increase by orienting the rows to the EW compared to NS. This resulted in most of the seasons an increase in water productivity calculated as grape yield/water-use ratio. Leaf gas exchange measurements partially agreed with the radiation interception simulations, suggesting a more complex regulatory mechanism and highlighting the importance of canopy microclimatic conditions in the physiological processes of hedgerow-managed crops. These findings encourage further research under field conditions and different soil water availabilities, aiming to optimize grapevine water productivity 2020-10-21T07:18:11Z 2020-10-21T07:18:11Z 2020 article acceptedVersion Buesa, I., Mirás-Avalos, J. M., & Intrigliolo, D. S. (2020). Row orientation effects on potted-vines performance and water-use efficiency. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, 294, 108148. 0168-1923 http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/6670 10.1016/j.agrformet.2020.108148 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0168192320302501 en Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 España http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/ openAccess Elsevier electronico
spellingShingle Canopy sunlight interception
Hedgerow
F06 Irrigation
Vitis vinifera
Water productivity
Buesa, Ignacio
Miras-Ávalos, José M.
Intrigliolo, Diego S.
Row orientation effects on potted-vines performance and water-use efficiency
title Row orientation effects on potted-vines performance and water-use efficiency
title_full Row orientation effects on potted-vines performance and water-use efficiency
title_fullStr Row orientation effects on potted-vines performance and water-use efficiency
title_full_unstemmed Row orientation effects on potted-vines performance and water-use efficiency
title_short Row orientation effects on potted-vines performance and water-use efficiency
title_sort row orientation effects on potted vines performance and water use efficiency
topic Canopy sunlight interception
Hedgerow
F06 Irrigation
Vitis vinifera
Water productivity
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/6670
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0168192320302501
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