Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4566602 Scientia Horticulturae 2014 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Water use efficiency (WUE) is a primary determinant of plant responses to drought.•WUE at leaf and plant level was assessed in cv. Montepulciano under drought.•Increased leaf WUE under water stress was not confirmed at the plant level.•Lower canopy WUE under drought correlated with poorer vine performance.•Recommendation is supplying not less than 70% of vine water use before veraison.

Understanding how water use efficiency (WUE) changes under drought is crucial for interpreting adaptive responses of species and cultivars to such abiotic stress. Several recent papers have concluded that in grapevine these responses and the guidelines stemming therefrom can differ, depending upon the parameter chosen to express WUE. In the present paper a complete set of WUE expressions, including the physiological and agronomical, were compared in potted, fruiting cv. Montepulciano (Vitis vinifera L.) grapevines which were either well watered (WW) or subjected to progressive pre-veraison drought (WS) by supplying decreasing fractions (i.e. 70%, 50% and 30% of daily vine transpiration, Tg) determined gravimetrically before vines were fully rewatered. While single-leaf intrinsic water-use efficiency (WUEi) increased with water stress severity, seasonal and diurnal whole-canopy WUE were similar at pre-stress, 70% Tg, and upon rewatering but dropped in WS during severe water stress. Agronomic WUE calculated as mass of dry weight stored in annual biomass (leaves, canes and bunches) per L of water used, was also lower in WS, whereas WS had similar must composition with WW despite a 37% reduction in the yield per vine. Results warn that whole-canopy WUE is a much better index than any single-leaf based WUE parameter for extrapolation to agronomic WUE and actual grape composition. Under our specific case study, it can be recommended that, to avoid significant profit loss, water supply to drought stressed Montepulciano at pre-veraison should not be lower than 70% of daily vine water use.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Horticulture
Authors
, , , , , , ,