Literature DB >> 33519859

Evaluating Strategies for Adaptation to Climate Change in Grapevine Production-A Systematic Review.

Audrey Naulleau1, Christian Gary1, Laurent Prévot2, Laure Hossard3.   

Abstract

In many areas of the world, maintaining grapevine production will require adaptation to climate change. While rigorous evaluations of adaptation strategies provide decision makers with valuable insights, those that are published often overlook major constraints, ignore local adaptive capacity, and suffer from a compartmentalization of disciplines and scales. The objective of our study was to identify current knowledge of evaluation methods and their limitations, reported in the literature. We reviewed 111 papers that evaluate adaptation strategies in the main vineyards worldwide. Evaluation approaches are analyzed through key features (e.g., climate data sources, methodology, evaluation criteria) to discuss their ability to address climate change issues, and to identify promising outcomes for climate change adaptations. We highlight the fact that combining adaptation levers in the short and long term (location, vine training, irrigation, soil, and canopy management, etc.) enables local compromises to be reached between future water availability and grapevine productivity. The main findings of the paper are three-fold: (1) the evaluation of a combination of adaptation strategies provides better solutions for adapting to climate change; (2) multi-scale studies allow local constraints and opportunities to be considered; and (3) only a small number of studies have developed multi-scale and multi-lever approaches to quantify feasibility and effectiveness of adaptation. In addition, we found that climate data sources were not systematically clearly presented, and that climate uncertainty was hardly accounted for. Moreover, only a small number of studies have assessed the economic impacts of adaptation, especially at farm scale. We conclude that the development of methodologies to evaluate adaptation strategies, considering both complementary adaptations and scales, is essential if relevant information is to be provided to the decision-makers of the wine industry.
Copyright © 2021 Naulleau, Gary, Prévot and Hossard.

Entities:  

Keywords:  adaptation evaluation; climate change; drought; management practices; multi-criteria; multi-scale; viticulture

Year:  2021        PMID: 33519859      PMCID: PMC7840846          DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2020.607859

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Plant Sci        ISSN: 1664-462X            Impact factor:   5.753


  4 in total

Review 1.  Climate Change Effects on Grapevine Physiology and Biochemistry: Benefits and Challenges of High Altitude as an Adaptation Strategy.

Authors:  Leonardo A Arias; Federico Berli; Ariel Fontana; Rubén Bottini; Patricia Piccoli
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2022-05-26       Impact factor: 6.627

2.  Adapting Grapevine Productivity and Fitness to Water Deficit by Means of Naturalized Rootstocks.

Authors:  Emilio Villalobos-Soublett; Nicolás Verdugo-Vásquez; Irina Díaz; Andrés Zurita-Silva
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2022-05-24       Impact factor: 6.627

3.  Productiveness and Berry Quality of New Wine Grape Genotypes Grown under Drought Conditions in a Semi-Arid Wine-Producing Mediterranean Region.

Authors:  Diego José Fernández-López; José Ignacio Fernández-Fernández; Celia Martínez-Mora; Juan Antonio Bleda-Sánchez; Leonor Ruiz-García
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2022-05-20

4.  The Comparison of Soil Agrochemical and Biological Properties in the Multi-Cropping Farming Systems.

Authors:  Aušra Rudinskienė; Aušra Marcinkevičienė; Rimantas Velička; Robertas Kosteckas; Zita Kriaučiūnienė; Rimantas Vaisvalavičius
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-14
  4 in total

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