Thursday, October 24, 2019
Tuesday, October 22, 2019
Installation of weather station near Santa Fe
Installation of weather station at Santa Fe County vineyard exploration site
October 21, 2019, As part of a vineyard site assessment project commissioned by Santa Fe County, NMSU viticulture installed a weather station to track temperature, wind speed and direction, relative humidity, growing degree days (GDDs), chilling hours and precipitation. The station will provide climatic data to aid characterization of the site and its suitability to support commercial grape production.
October 21, 2019, As part of a vineyard site assessment project commissioned by Santa Fe County, NMSU viticulture installed a weather station to track temperature, wind speed and direction, relative humidity, growing degree days (GDDs), chilling hours and precipitation. The station will provide climatic data to aid characterization of the site and its suitability to support commercial grape production.
a |
Miranda Kersten, Research IPM Scientist, adjusting wind speed/direction anemometer on Spectrum weather station a Santa Fe County, vineyard exploration/assessment site, south of Santa Fe |
Monday, October 21, 2019
Installation of drip tape in row middles for cover crops
Vineyard cover crop research, Fabian Garcia ASC, Las Cruces
posted by Jacqueline Cormier, PhD graduate student, NMSU Viticulture
At the Fabian Garcia
Science Center, the cover crop trial is well on its way. The drip tape was
installed into the Malbec block on September 27, 2019. This drip tape
will enable us to be more precise with our watering than our previous flood set
up. Being on drip we can now water the south and north sides of the field
independently from one another. This is important because like many more
permanent and commercial sites, our field is no longer perfectly level. The grape
vines themselves are also on drip irrigation, thus, we can efficiently manage
our water use.
One of the cover crops we are working with this year is
‘Ameristand 803T’ alfalfa which was seeded on October 3, 2019 and is already up
in our plots. We planted the alfalfa with a rhizobium inoculant to give it a good head
start.
Photo credit Fausto Baranzini Rogel. |
Friday, October 18, 2019
Spur versus Cane...the discussion continues
It IS early, but something to consider as pruning season approaches...
Take a look at this video/interview (link below) with Dr. Patty Skinkis of Oregon State University as she explains/discusses the results of her experiment comparing spur pruning and cane pruning. One of the grower objections to spur pruning, despite its fitness and suitability to mechanization, is lower yields with spur pruning compared to cane pruning. The supposed yield loss was based on lower bud fruitfulness of buds located on the base of the cane that make up the "spur". Check it out for yourself and assess the empirical results that Dr. Skinkis and her team determined.Dr. Patty Skinkis in American Vineyard Magazine spur pruning with no yield loss
Thursday, October 17, 2019
Orderly and planned death...senescence
Leaves and orderly senescence...or not
Photo of grapevines with yellowing leaves ... |
Photo of vines with dead leaves at Los Lunas ASC, October 15, 2019 |
Recently I posted about leaf senescence. In the photo above, taken at the Santa Ana vineyard north of Bernalillo, NM in 2018. One can see senescence in action with yellowing over time. This was not the case this year...vines were hit with a killing frost on October 9-11, 2019 (see photos below and to the right).
Photo of vines at Santa Ana Vineyard, October 14, 2019 |
Wednesday, October 16, 2019
What is not "logical" about cover crops?
"Illogical Captain" ...Cover Crops in New Mexico Vineyards?
Dr.
Mark Greenspan begins his recent article on cover crop selection (Wine Business
Monthly, October 2019, https://www.winebusiness.com/wbm/ ) by describing what species of cover crops to utilize in
vineyards. He restricts his comments for application/consideration in “wetter
growing regions”, as dry winter regions are “challenging, or borderline
impossible” places to establish cover crops. Dr. Greenspan continues: “…using additional water to grow a cover crop that sucks up more water from the
ground in a dry climate does not seem desirable or logical”. Dr. Greenspan lists the many benefits of cover crops in vineyards: mitigation of soil
compaction, erosion reduction, improved water infiltration, improved soil
organic matter, increased soil aeration, providing substrate (food?) for soil
microbiota, moderating vineyard microclimate and reduction of dust and mites, adding nitrogen to the soil (legumes) and the support
of beneficial insects…not to mention the aesthetic appeal of flowering cover
crops. These cover crop benefits sound like they are,... well, beneficial.
As described above, vineyard cover crops offer a potentially
long list of benefits. Is it “illogical” to apply some water to gain these
benefits? The use of such “illogical” cover crops in “dry regions” begs the
question: Does the additional water required by the cover crop justify its
benefits? As one trained to be a professional skeptic, I’m not sure.
Consequently, I have adopted the use of cover crops in the experimental
vineyard at Los Lunas ASC to begin to explore this (Figure 1).The cover crop being used this fall at Los Lunas is triticale or Triticosecale,
a hybrid of wheat (Triticum) and rye (Secale) and was seeded on
9/25/2019 with a flood irrigation applied on 9/26/2019. Ten days later, the
triticale was up and growing...covering the row middles (Figure 2). The plan is
to allow it establish and cover the row middles until about March and then overseed
with a native grass and pollinator mix.
This question, or
comparison of cost:benefit ratio deserves quantification and a scientific
accounting here in New Mexico. NMSU Viticulture PhD graduate student, Ms.
Jacqueline Cormier, has established several cover crop plots in the Malbec
vineyard at Fabian Garcia ASC in Las Cruces, to systematically investigate this
cover crop cost:benefit ratio question. Bear in mind that several New Mexico
winegrowers have been using cover crops for years, and clearly believe their
benefits are worth the cost and effort. We look forward to Ms. Cormier’s
empirical results. I suggest you go to the Wine Business Monthly website and read Dr. Greenspan's article for yourself.
As to Dr.Greenspan's description of some regions as "challenging or borderline impossible" to support cover cover crops, what about those two words is unfamiliar to anyone who has successfully (or not so successfully) grown wine grapes in New Mexico?
Tuesday, October 15, 2019
Rootstock Study Harvest 2019
Harvest of Rootstock Study at Farmington ASC
With the help of Dr. Kevin Lombard and crew at the Farmington ASC we harvested the 72 plots of Refosco and Gewurztraminer each on nine different rootstocks, Harvest took place on September 25th for the Refosco plots and Gewurztraminer plots were harvested on September 27th. Total weight per vine was measured. In previous years, total weight, cluster number and individual cluster weights were collected and measured.In the video above, the bird net was removed prior to harvest. The mechanism you see is widely used in Australia and other grape growing regions throughout the world.Jason Thomas, Research Technician is manning the business end of the mechanism, by pulling the netting from the vine rows and stuffing the netting back into a bag for storage.
Leaf Senescence: How It Informs Vine Health and Vineyard Management
October 14, 2019 | Written by: Gill
-
Leaf senescence: “planned death”, signals the
growing season end for temperate zone plants (https://www.hunker.com/12003940/flowers-plants-found-in-temperate-forests)
inclusive of grapevines. Leaves contain the green pigmented compound
chlorophyll, that is directly active in photosynthesis. Photosynthesis (Pn),
the process that transforms light energy, CO2, and H2O to chemical energy, O2,
and H2O is fundamental to life as we know it. Pn uses visible spectrum light
waves from about 400 nm (blue) to about 700 nm (red). Grape leaves absorb most
of the damaging UV light, but are transparent to visible light. Photosynthesis does
not use light wavelengths that are very short (<400 nm, ultraviolet) or very
long (>700 nm, infrared).
- Age matters. Young and old leaves are not as
effective at Pn as are ‘middle aged’ leaves, that is, leaves that are about 40
days old. Younger leaves are not fully functional and older leaves in the
process of breaking down, are not as photosynthetically efficient.
o
“So, what?”, you might say, but photosynthesis
is important to savvy winegrowers, because Pn, light, and leaves impact the
yield and quality of your wine. Berry composition and wine “quality” depends on
vine health and canopy management. To effectively manage your vine’s canopy,
some knowledge of leaf physiology…or “the life of the leaf” is useful.
-
Light directly affects a grapevine in several
ways:
o
Light impacts grape berry composition (color,
flavor and aroma),inflorescence initiation and fruit set, incidence of disease and
cane maturation (formation of periderm and lignification).
o The
thing to keep in mind, especially in sunlight rich New Mexico, is that a green
plant’s leaves use no more than ~5% of the incident sunlight. Five percent
would be an amount we would normally dismiss, if not for life’s total
dependence on that 5%! Nonetheless, the
other 95% makes trouble, as it can lead to excessive heat (Figure 1).
Figure 1. Chardonnay grapes with browning and damage due to over-exposure to sunlight and consequent buildup of excessive heat. |
-
Temperature is important, as 50o
degrees F is the lower limit of activity for temperate zone plants. Photosynthesis
works best in the temperature range of 68o to 95o degrees
F. However, the optimum temperature for grape leaves has not been fully defined.
- So, speaking of light, what triggers
“senescence”?
o
Decreasing daylength triggers leaf senescence. Senescence
should begin on the same day for a given cultivar at given latitude. The
critical daylength will vary according to cultivar and species.
o
Progression of senescence will be slower in a cool
year and faster in warm years.
o
Heat stress can accelerate the process.
-
Leaves turn yellow as chlorophylls are degraded
more rapidly than yellow-orange carotenoid pigments and the latter are
“unmasked” and become visible.
-
Newly produced red anthocyanins will present
themselves after chlorophyll has degraded over half way. Leaves of most grape
cultivars, including dark-skinned types, are yellow rather than red. The red
colored leaves we sometimes see are likely due to anthocyanins formed by
restricted phloem. Restrictions of the phloem can be due to disease infection,
wind injury, nutrient deficiency or girdling, (Figures 2 and 3). Feeding by the
three-cornered leaf hopper (Figure 3) that constricts the phloem can result in a
red leaf or entire shoot. These phenomena are not uncommon in New Mexico.
Figure 2. Grapevine with red leaves, likely a result of infection by Agrobacterium vitis, that results in Crown Gall and constriction of the vine’s vascular system. |
Figure
3. Feeding by the three-cornered leaf hopper that has ‘girdled’ the leaf
petiole and caused it to turn red due to the formation of red pigmented
anthocyanins. |
- Anthocyanins in leaves are phenolic compounds
that once released into the soil can act to suppress germination of other
species (weeds) thus, acting as preemergence bioherbicides!
o
As chlorophyll breaks down it no longer
assimilates carbon. All the proteins, amino acids and nutrients in the leaves
are then exported to other plant parts. Chlorophyll itself is degraded and
broken down because when not used in Pn it is a strong phytotoxin!
o
Some carbon is used to generate the energy for
the process itself.
o
Leaves remobilize 50-80% of their N and P, 50%
of their sulfur and 20% of their iron before they die and fall to the ground.
This might be a reason to retain leaves post-harvest to allow the storage of
these mineral nutrients in the vine’s semi-permanent parts: cordons, trunks and
roots.
o
After leaves senescence, the phloem is plugged
and sealed, the leaves break away at the base of the petiole (abscise).
o
So, the vine invests most of its carbon and
nitrogen in leaves. The leaves, in turn, cycle this material into perennial
plant parts and organic material or humus that is formed in the soil after the
leaves fall and are broken down…
“the circle of life” so to speak.
“the circle of life” so to speak.
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