Nov 23, 2021 | Historic and future climate variability and climate change: effects on vocation, stress and new vine areas (T2010), IVES Conference Series, Terroir 2010
The potential climate change, due to global change, will increase temperature general and could increase at local level. These changes are not going to be the same in different parts of the world, being especially important in the Mediterranean Basin.
Nov 23, 2021 | Historic and future climate variability and climate change: effects on vocation, stress and new vine areas (T2010), IVES Conference Series, Terroir 2010
In Franconia, the northern part of Bavaria in Germany, climate change, visible in earlier bud break, advanced flowering and earlier grape maturity, leads to a decrease of traditionally cultivated early ripening aromatic white wine varieties as Mueller-Thurgau (30 % of the wine growing area) and Bacchus (12 %). With the predicted rise of temperature in all European wine regions the conditions for white wine grape varieties will decline and the grapes themselves will lose a part of their aromatic and fruity expression. Variety change towards the cultivation of later ripening white wine varieties is a very expensive and long-term process, and must be accompanied by special marketing efforts.
Nov 22, 2021 | Historic and future climate variability and climate change: effects on vocation, stress and new vine areas (T2010), IVES Conference Series, Terroir 2010
This study present a detailed analysis of the rainfall and temperature changes in the Penedès region in the period 1995/ 96 – 2008/09, in comparison with the trends observed during the last 50 years, and its implications on phenology and yield.
Nov 22, 2021 | Historic and future climate variability and climate change: effects on vocation, stress and new vine areas (T2010), IVES Conference Series, Terroir 2010
Ontario’s wine regions lie at the climatic margins of commercial viticulture owing to their cold winters and short cool growing season. The gradual warming of northern latitudes projected under a human-induced climate change scenario could bring mixed benefits to these wine regions.
Nov 22, 2021 | IVES Conference Series, New methods and technologies to describe the environment (T2010), Terroir 2010
A 3-year study was carried out in order to evaluate the ecophysiology, yield and quality characteristics of Vitis vinifera L. cv. Kékfrankos (syn. Limberger) at Eger-Nagyeged hill (steep slope) and at Eger-Kőlyuktető (flat) vineyard sites located in the Eger wine region, Hungary.