Literature DB >> 25119825

Nut crop yield records show that budbreak-based chilling requirements may not reflect yield decline chill thresholds.

Katherine S Pope1, Volker Dose, David Da Silva, Patrick H Brown, Theodore M DeJong.   

Abstract

Warming winters due to climate change may critically affect temperate tree species. Insufficiently cold winters are thought to result in fewer viable flower buds and the subsequent development of fewer fruits or nuts, decreasing the yield of an orchard or fecundity of a species. The best existing approximation for a threshold of sufficient cold accumulation, the "chilling requirement" of a species or variety, has been quantified by manipulating or modeling the conditions that result in dormant bud breaking. However, the physiological processes that affect budbreak are not the same as those that determine yield. This study sought to test whether budbreak-based chilling thresholds can reasonably approximate the thresholds that affect yield, particularly regarding the potential impacts of climate change on temperate tree crop yields. County-wide yield records for almond (Prunus dulcis), pistachio (Pistacia vera), and walnut (Juglans regia) in the Central Valley of California were compared with 50 years of weather records. Bayesian nonparametric function estimation was used to model yield potentials at varying amounts of chill accumulation. In almonds, average yields occurred when chill accumulation was close to the budbreak-based chilling requirement. However, in the other two crops, pistachios and walnuts, the best previous estimate of the budbreak-based chilling requirements was 19-32 % higher than the chilling accumulations associated with average or above average yields. This research indicates that physiological processes beyond requirements for budbreak should be considered when estimating chill accumulation thresholds of yield decline and potential impacts of climate change.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25119825     DOI: 10.1007/s00484-014-0881-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Biometeorol        ISSN: 0020-7128            Impact factor:   3.787


  5 in total

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Authors:  Eike Luedeling; Patrick H Brown
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3.  Detecting nonlinear response of spring phenology to climate change by Bayesian analysis.

Authors:  Katherine S Pope; Volker Dose; David Da Silva; Patrick H Brown; Charles A Leslie; Theodore M Dejong
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4.  Seasonal carbohydrate storage and mobilization in bearing and non-bearing pistachio (Pistacia vera) trees.

Authors:  Timothy M Spann; Robert H Beede; Theodore M Dejong
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Authors:  Eike Luedeling; Minghua Zhang; Evan H Girvetz
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2009-07-16       Impact factor: 3.240

  5 in total
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Journal:  Planta       Date:  2017-05-09       Impact factor: 4.116

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  4 in total

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