GiESCO 2019 banner
IVES 9 IVES Conference Series 9 GiESCO 9 Mapping plant water status to indirectly assess variability in grape flavonoids and inform selective harvest decisions

Mapping plant water status to indirectly assess variability in grape flavonoids and inform selective harvest decisions

Abstract

Context and purpose of the study – Plant water stress affects grape (Vitis vinifera L.) berry composition and is variable in space due to variations in the physical environment at the growing site. Could we use water status maps as a sensitive tool to discriminate between harvest zones?

Material and methods – The study was carried out on 35experimental units placed on an equidistant grid within a 3.5 ha vineyard located in Sonoma County, Northern California. This drip irrigated vineyard was planted with Cabernet-Sauvignon on 110R, spur pruned and trained in two single high wires in a horizontally split canopy. The site was described through a digital elevation model, terrain analysis, NDVI and electrical resistivity maps. The natural variability of grapevine water stress was monitored by stem water potential (Ψstem), leaf gas exchange and δ13C of grape must at harvest. Geospatial analysis and clustering were used to differentiate the vineyard block into two management zones according to variability in water status.

Results – The two management zones were very distinct in water status and presented severe and moderate water stress. The average difference in Ψstem between the zones was of 0.2 MPa. Differences in stem water potential affected stomatal conductance, net carbon assimilation, and intrinsic water use efficiency that were different in all measurement dates. The two zones were selectively sampled at harvest for measurements of berry chemistry. Berry mass and yield per vine in the two water status zones were not different. A significant difference in total soluble solids (3.56 Brix) and in titratable acidity indicated a direct effect of water stress on ripening acceleration. Berry skin flavonol and anthocyanin composition and concentration were measured by C18 reversed-phased high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Berry anthocyanins showed the highest differences between the two water stress zones. Dihydroxylated anthocyanins were more affected than the trihydroxylated ones, therefore, the ratio of the two forms increased. Flavonols were different in total amounts, but hydroxylation patterns were not affected. Proanthocyanidin isolates were characterized by acid catalysis in the presence of excess phloroglucinol followed by reversed-phase HPLC. Proanthocyanidins showed the least significant difference, although (+)-catechin terminal subunits were important predictors in a partial least square model used to summarize the multivariate relationships, predicting Ψstem or the management zone. The results highlight the importance of vineyard water status information for differential harvesting or direction to vineyard operators to modify irrigation management to equilibrate berry composition at harvest.

DOI:

Publication date: September 27, 2023

Issue: GiESCO 2019

Type: Poster

Authors

Luca BRILLANTE1*, Luis SANCHEZ2, Johann MARTINEZ-LUSHER3, Runze YU3, S. Kaan KURTURAL3

1 Dep. of Viticulture and Enology, California State University, Fresno, CA 93740. USA
2 E. J. Gallo Winery, 1541 Cummins Drive, Modesto, California 95358, United States
3 Department of Viticulture and Enology, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA

Contact the author

Keywords

selective harvest, spatial variability, management zones, water stress, anthocyanins, flavonols, proanthocyanidins

Tags

Citation

Related articles…

Potential deacidifying role of a commercial chitosan: impact on pH, titratable acidity, and organic acids in model solutions and white wine

Chitin is the main structural component of a large number of organisms (i.e., mollusks, insects, crustaceans, fungi, algae), and marine invertebrates including crabs and shrimps.

Amyndeon‐naoussa: the two faces of Xinomavro

Xinomavro is the most important indigenous red wine variety grown in Northern Greece. It participates in the production of several PGI wines in Macedonia while from 100% Xinomavro the PDO “Amyndeon” and “Naoussa” are produced. The viticultural area of Amyndeon lies in a plateau of 550 ‐700 m of altitude, in a semi‐continental climate with mostly deep sandy loamy soils derived from limestone and marl bedrocks while in Naoussa, Xinomavro is grown in a Mediterranean climate on more heavy textured soils, sandy clay loam to clay, derived from ophiolithic, limestone and marl bedrocks, in an altitude which varies from 150 to 400 m. Different soil, climate and viticultural technique interactions, result in great variability with respect to morphological, ampelographical and physiological characters of Xinomavro as well as in the characteristics of the wines produced. 

Unravelling regional typicality of Australian premium Shiraz through an untargeted metabolomics approach

Aims: The current study seeks to demonstrate that premium Shiraz wines from different Australian geographic indications (GI) can be distinguished by their volatile compound composition. 

Étude des potentialités des terroirs viticoles: une démarche globale en zone A.O.C. L’exemple des Côtes du Rhône

Depuis près d’une quinzaine d’années, l’Appellation d’Origine Contrôlée (A.O.C.) Côtes du Rhône a engagé un vaste programme afin de mieux connaître et valoriser les potentialités des différents terroirs qui la composent.

Identification of important genomic regions controlling resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses in Vitis sp. through QTL meta-analysis

In the context of global change, the environmental conditions are expected to be more stressful for viticulture. The choice of the rootstock may play a crucial role to improve the adaptation of viticulture to new biotic and abiotic threats (Ollat et al., 2016). However, the selection of interesting traits in rootstock breeding programs is complex because of the combination of multiple targets in a same ideotype. In this sense, the integration of studies about the genetic architecture for desired biotic and abiotic response traits allow us to identify genomic regions to combine and those with interesting pleiotropic effects.