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IVES 9 IVES Conference Series 9 Terclim 9 Terclim 2026 9 Terclim 2026 – Session 3: Impacts of changing terroir components on product identity 9 Upper opening of canopy on vertical trellis: soil moisture and stem water potential in cv. Tempranillo in the D.O. Ribera del Duero

Upper opening of canopy on vertical trellis: soil moisture and stem water potential in cv. Tempranillo in the D.O. Ribera del Duero

Abstract

Water relations in vineyards are affected by microclimatic conditions, which impact the plant water status and the vine physiological response. Given the current climate variability, the potential value of applying techniques that can reduce adverse water and thermal effects on the vineyard is emerging. Therefore, it is important to understand the effects that leaf surface management can have on soil water availability and the vineyard water response.

The influence of opening of the upper part of the vertical trellis canopy on soil moisture content (60 cm) and stem water potential was studied during the 2021-2023 period. The work was carried out in a Tempranillo vineyard grafted onto 110R rootstock in the D.O. Ribera del Duero (Valladolid, Spain), trained on vertical trellis, using bilateral Royat cordon pruning. Traditional vertical canopy and Alternative opening canopy were the treatments applied, establishing 4 random blocks with elementary plots of 48 vines, distributed in 4 rows of 12 vines each.

The upper opening of the canopy on trellis system showed a slight tendency to decrease in soil moisture content and stem water potential, both in measurements taken before and after weekly irrigation. This effect appears to have been related to greater leaf exposure throughout the day, which may have led to greater water demand. The temperature of the basal zone of the leaf surface was also slightly reduced. However, it would be advisable to expand the experiment by varying the opening width of the canopy in different vineyard conditions related to soil and climate.

References

de Rességuier, L., Pieri, P., Mary, S., Pons, R., Petitjean, T. & van Leeuwen, C. (2023). Characterisation of the vertical temperature gradient in the canopy reveals increased trunk height to be a potential adaptation to climate change. Oeno One 57, 41-53.

Keller, M. (2015). The Science of Grapevines. Anatomy and Physiology. Elsevier. 509 p.

Schultz, H.R. & Hoffman, M. (2015). The ups and downs of environmental impact on grapevines. Future challenges in temperate viticulture. In: Grapevine in a Changing Environment: A Molecular and Ecophysiological Perspective. Ed. Wiley, pp:18-37.

Vacas, R., Martínez-Porro, D., Vélez, S. & Yuste, J. (2024). Análisis de los efectos de diferentes estrategias de riego y manejo del canopy en cv. Tempranillo mediante imágenes térmicas y multiespectrales obtenidas con UAV. V jornadas de viticultura de la Sociedad Española de Ciencias Hortícolas, Orense, june 25-27.

Xyrafis, E.G., Gambetta, G.A. & Biniari, K. (2023). A comparative study on training systems and vine density in Santorini Island: Physiological, microclimate, yield and quality attributes. Oeno One 57, 141-152.

Zito, S., van Leeuwen, C. & Bois, B. (2024). Impact of training system, soil management and soil water holding capacity on vine water status in a changing climate over 60 years in the Cognac production area. Oeno One 58, 1-14. https://doi.org/10.20870/oeno-one.2024.58.4.8198

Acknowledgments

To project PID2019-105039RR-C42 (AEI/MICINN), De los Ríos Prieto winery and colaborators of ITACYL through projects GO PRERIVID (MAPA) and PID2023-146911OR-C52 (AEI/MICIU).

Publication date: June 29, 2026

Issue: Terclim 2026

Type: Poster

Authors

Jesús Yuste1,*, Daniel Martínez-Porro1

1 Instituto Tecnológico Agrario de Castilla y León, Valladolid (Spain)

Contact the author*

Keywords

evapotranspiration, grapevine, heat stress, water deficit, water stress

Tags

IVES Conference Series | terclim | Terclim 2026

Citation

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