1 / 36

Grape Biology

Grape Biology. Rebecca Harbut Dept of Horticulture, UW-Madison. Vitaceae. Mostly woody, tree-climbing vines Tendrils and inflorescences opposite the leaves 12 genera within the family Vitis Ampelocissus Clematicissus Parthenocissus (Virginia Creeper) Ampelopsis Cissus (Kangaroo vine).

Download Presentation

Grape Biology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Grape Biology Rebecca Harbut Dept of Horticulture, UW-Madison

  2. Vitaceae • Mostly woody, tree-climbing vines • Tendrilsand inflorescences opposite the leaves • 12 genera within the family • Vitis • Ampelocissus • Clematicissus • Parthenocissus(Virginia Creeper) • Ampelopsis • Cissus(Kangaroo vine)

  3. Genus Vitis • 60 species of grape • 30 species native to North America • Two subgenera: • Euvitis(38 chromosomes) • Grapes adhere to cluster • Muscadinia(40 chromosomes) • Grapes fall off cluster as they mature

  4. Genus Vitis • Euvitis • Vitisvinifera European wine grapes • Over 5000 cultivars • 90% of world grape production • Vitislabrusca American species, fox grape • VitisripariaAmerican species, ‘cold- climate grapes • French-American hybrids • ‘Marechal Foch', ‘Vidal Blanc', ‘Chambourcin', and ‘Seyval'. • Muscadinia • VitisrotundifoliaMuscadine grapes (grown in SE USA, lack cold hardiness

  5. VitisVinifera Cold tender More upright growth Phloxera susceptible VitisLabrusca & VitisRiparia More cold hardy More trailing growth More vigorous growth European vs. American

  6. Grape Use In U.S. Wine - 50-55%   Raisins - 25-30% Table - 10-15%             Juice, jelly, etc. - 6-9% Canned - < 1%

  7. Grape Anatomy

  8. Roots • Grapes have tap root system • Main tap root with lateral roots • Most absorption (nutrients and water) carried out by root tips and root hairs • Soil conditions are critical (proper soil test and site prep) • Vesicular arbuscularmycorrhizae (VAM) • Most associated with plants in low P soils • Most grapes have VAM infecting roots

  9. Rootstocks • Primary reason - Phylloxera resistance • 3 species used: 1) Vitisrupestris: A native of the eastern United States which provides vigor2) Vitisberlandieri: A native of the dry southwestern United States which provides drought tolerance.3) Vitisriperia: A native of the northeastern United States which provides cool weather tolerance. Photo: OSU

  10. Own Rooted Vs. Rootstocks • Grafted vines can be more expensive • Increased time in nursery • More labor • Own rooted can be better in areas prone to winter damage as new growth can come from established roots • Rootstocks can be used to compensate for less than ideal sites

  11. Root Growth and Irrigation • Root growth is critical for vine establishment • Irrigation during can allow for improved root establishment • Deep watering encourages roots to move down into the soil profile

  12. Trunk • Primary support structure • Important in carbohydrate storage • May be single or split

  13. Canes, Cordons and Shoots…Oh My! • Cordon-permanent stem • Trained horizontally • Not all systems have cordons • Cane • One year old shoot • SPUR- Canes pruned to 2-3 buds • Shoot • Current seasons growth • Bear fruit clusters

  14. One year old cane Shoot Cluster Tendril

  15. Buds Initiation • Primordia- undefined tissue with potential to develop into a defined structure • Primordia can become: tendril, shoot, inflorescence • Temperature, vine vigor, light affect cluster size and number • Primordia initiate when only few inches from growing shoot tip

  16. Buds Differentiation • Differentiation- process in which primordia become committed to develop into a specialized tissue • Tendril, inflorescence, shoot • Secondary buds differentiate later • Important if primary bud is killed

  17. Primary Bud Tertiary Bud Secondary Bud

  18. Tendrils • Specialized lateral branches • Derived from same undifferentiated primordia as flowers • Grow away from the light • Become lignified • Allow plant to invest less in structural trunk • If tendril does not latch onto anything it will wither and die • Tendrils have determinate growth

  19. Flowers • Small 1/8 inch, indiscrete • 5 sepals, petals, stamens • Superior ovary • 2 locules/2 ovules per locule • Cultivated grapes have perfect flowers • Some wild have male and female flowers • Evidence that cross pollination increases size

  20. Fused petals = calyptra

  21. Inflorescence/Cluster • Panicle inflorescence • Inflorescence usually on 3rd or higher node • # of inflorescence (clusters)/shoot varies by: • Management, cultivar, environment • 0 to 5 (or more)

  22. Hardiness • Vinifera • 0 to -10°F bud injury • <-10°F trunk injury • French hybrids • -10°F bud and trunk injury • -20°F kill buds and trunks • American types • -20°F would cause crop reduction

  23. Flowering • Grapes flower long after bud-break • Shoot must develop enough leaves to support fruit development • Flowers open when shoots have 15-17 nodes • Length of flowering period dependent on environment

  24. Pollination • Wind pollinated • Weather dependent • Fertilization dependant on weather • Pollen tube must grow down through style (highly temperature dependent) • Cool weather during fertilization decreases fruit set

  25. Fruit Set • Fruit Set- percent of flower buds that develop fruit • Auxins (hormone) are released from pollen tube which stimulates growth of ovarian tissue • Factors affecting fruit set: • Temperature • Light (photosynthesis) • Stored carbohydrates • Water • Nutrients ~ primarily Zn and B

  26. Fruit • Grapes are true berries • primary tissue from ovarian tissues • Berry size influenced presence or absence of seeds and then seed mass • V. vinifera- 1-2 seeds • V. lubrusca >2 seeds • Seedless grapes • Most not really seedless (stenospermocarpic) • Seeds form, but abort • Still enough hormone production to stimulate large berry growth • Truly seedless (parthenocarpic) have smaller berries

  27. Berry Composition • 75-85% water • 15-25% sugar • 0.5-1.0% organic acids (malic, tartaric, citric) • 0.25% pectin • Secondary metabolites

  28. Berry Composition:Secondary Metabolites • Components that make grapes distinctive • Not essential for survival of the plant • Thousands have been identified, likely many more • Phenolics, anthocyanins, flavenoids • Synthesis is genetically controlled • Influenced by: • Environment, plant age

  29. Phase I Phase II Phase III

  30. Berry Development:Phase I (0-40 DAF) • Phase I- cell division and expansion • 17 cells to 200,000 (600,000 cells at veraison) • No carbohydrate accumulation • Accumulation of tartaric and malic acid • Duration is similar for most cultivars • Berries are green due to cholorophyll

  31. Berry Development:Phase II (40-60 DAF) • Phase II-lag phase • Slowest phase of development • Berries are firm • Berries begin to loose chlorophyll • Organic acids accumulation peaks

  32. Berry Development:Phase III (60-120 DAF) • Phase III- Fruit softening (véraison) • Rapid berry growth (cell enlargement) • Initiation of ripening • Chlorophyll breaks down • Anthocyanins accumulate in skin (red grapes) • Sugars accumulate • Organic acids decline • Secondary metabolites accumulate

  33. Cabernet Sauvignon Flame Sauvignon blanc

  34. Propagation • Cuttings root easily • Cut canes with three nodes (bud) • Can also tip layer • Be careful about propagating your own material • Royalties, quality, identity

  35. Summary • Spend the time to understand the critical growth periods of the grape • Grapes are one of the most complex crops to grow • Before you grow it, be sure you know it!

More Related