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Environmental Constraints

Environmental Constraints. Text Chapter 3. Subtropical Regions. Most commercial citrus production 23.5 - 40 o NS Latitudes Minimum temperatures > -7 o C (19.6 o F Examples Rio Grande Valley ~ 26 o NL Orlando, Florida ~ 28 o NL Indio, California ~ 33 o NL.

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Environmental Constraints

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  1. Environmental Constraints Text Chapter 3

  2. Subtropical Regions • Most commercial citrus production • 23.5 - 40o NS Latitudes • Minimum temperatures > -7oC (19.6oF • Examples • Rio Grande Valley ~ 26o NL • Orlando, Florida ~ 28o NL • Indio, California ~ 33o NL

  3. Tropical - Subtropical Comparison • Tropical between 23.5o NL SL • Subtropical ® 100 tonnes ha-1 • Tropical ® 15 tonnes ha-1 • Minimum 0oC (32oF) • Small fluctuations in DL 10o NL SL • Small fluctuations in temp at low to mid elevations (-3oF/1000 Ft rule)

  4. Lowland Tropical Regions • Altitude 0 - 500 m • Highest average temperatures • Highest heat units • Distinct wet-dry cycles • Wet season onset of flowering

  5. High Elevation Tropical Regions • Fog reduces light intensity (Day) • Lowers temp & CO2 assimilation • Fog (Night) decreases radiation • Increases temp • Ultraviolet radiation increased • Due to reduced particulate matter • Leaf distortion & reduced growth

  6. Limiting Factors • Flower initiation av. < 24oC • Vegetative growth > 12.5oC • Heat units > 5000 • increased respiration • < fruit solids & acids

  7. Heat Unit Calculation 12.5C + 24.5C = 18.5 2 18.5 - 12.5 = 6 6 x 30 days =180 heat units / month 180 x 12 = 2160 heat units / year

  8. Examples Site Latitude Altitude HU • Weslaco 26o05’ N 40 m 3900 • Orlando 28o40’ N 30 m 3700 • Indio, CA 33o40’N -10 m 3900 • Degania Is. 32o40’N -200 m 3600 • Lmeira, Bz 22o30’S 700 m 3000 • Colombia 4o20’N 400 m 5700

  9. Diurnal Fluctuations • Greater in subtropical regions • Mean annual temps from 15 to 18oC • But many exposed to -0oC • Minimum of -10oC (14oF) Florida • Freeze damage in US, Europe, Mexico, Australia, central China. • Rarely in Brazil

  10. Far East • Minimal damage • Large bodies of water • Satsuma mandarin / Trifoliate orange • Extended periods of cool temps • Maximum freeze hardiness • Not true in Texas and Florida

  11. The Juvenile Plant • Thorny (modified leaves) • Upright unbranched growth habit • Apical meristem abscises • lateral buds break • new shoots from lateral buds • Process repeated ® Zig-zag growth (sympodial) ® Determinate habit

  12. Duration of Juvenility • Inversely related to • tree vigor • heat unit accumulation • Example • Lemons and limes < 2 years • Others - 5 to 13 years • Air layers ‘Tahiti’ lime - fruit in 1 year

  13. Hardiness • Seedling citrus > hardy than same cultivar budded to a root stock.

  14. Influence of Climate • Lowland tropical areas with high RF • Shorter juvenile period • Arid subtropical area • Longer juvenile period • Calamondin & ‘Key’ lime - 18 months • 30oC days, 25oC nights, 16 h DL • No flushes (continuous growth)

  15. The Budded Plant (Budling) • Adult - so earlier production. • Budling - • Riverside, CA ® 30 mo. Market sz • Mannar, Sri Lanka ® 15 mo. • Difference? • Riverside 1700 heat units • Mannar 5700 heat units

  16. Net CO2 Assimilation • Linear photosynthetic photon flux (PPF) up to 700 mmol m-2 s-1 (Fig. 3.3) • PPF of 2000 m-2 s-1 represents full sunlight • Thus max CO2 assimilation at 30% full sunlight • Max growth when DL 12 h

  17. Influence of High Radiation • High light intensity may decrease CO2 assimilation • High light increase leaf temp 10oC • Optimum range 28 - 30oC • > 35oC limits RuBisCo ® inc VPD • ® Mid day stomatal closure ® poor growth

  18. Shoot and Leaf Growth • Shoot growth - 2 to 5 distinct flushes • Tropical - may be continuous • Growth begins at >12.5oC (55oF) • Spring flush • March - April NL • September - October SL • Mean temps 12 - 20oC in this period

  19. Other Flushes • Summer flushes • June - July NL • January - February SL • Fewer growing points • Longer internodes • Tropical - continuous • Same annual growth - distribution?

  20. Leaf Area • 3 year old tree - 16,000 leaves (34 m2) • 29 yr tree - 173,000 (203 m2) • Interior PPF down to 50 mmol m-2 s-1 • What should be done?

  21. Leaf Function • Leaves C importers ~ 6 wks post bloom • Stomata on abaxial surface take time to develop - poor transpiration contr. • CO2 assimilation stabilizes in ~ 7 mo • Healthy citrus leaves may for 3 yrs.

  22. Root Growth • Temp regulates root growth, water, and nutrient uptake • Root growth begins at temp > 7oC • May - June and August - Sept. • Increases from 17 to 30oC • Water & nutrient uptake inc 10 - 30oC • Winter chlorosis

  23. Water and Root Growth • Root growth decreases significantly • When soil moisture < 45% of field capacity. • Excessive water for only a few days due to H2S produced by soil-bore bacteria caused by lack of oxygen.

  24. Flower Induction and Differentiation • Flower bud differentiation occurs during winter rest in subtropics • Or during dry season in tropics • Temperatures < 25oC ® rest • Drought > 30 days induce flower bud • Italy - water withheld from lemons - irrigated - blooms - control harvest

  25. Anthesis • Events leading to anthesis (Fig. 3.5) • Min. threshold 9.4oC (48oF) • Low to moderate temps during bloom (<20oC) ® protracted bloom • Higher temps (25-30oC) shorter bloom

  26. Factors Associated with Flowering • Carbohydrates • Girdling • Alternate bearing mandarins • Hormones - GA3 influence not clear • Nutrition -

  27. Carbohydrate / Nitrogen Ratio • I II III IV • C/NNNN CC/NNN CCC/NN CCCC/N • No fruit No Yes No • Age ® • Pruning ¬ • Irrigation ¬ • Nitrogen fertilizer ¬

  28. Pollination and Fruit Set • Bee activity minimal temp < 12.5oC • Pollen germination best at 25 - 30oC • Pollen tube growth through stylar canals - 2 days to 4 wks • Depending on cultivar & temp.

  29. Initial Fruit Set • 100,000 - 200,000 flowers / tree • Only 1 - 2 % produce fruit • 1st drop - 3 - 4 weeks post bloom • Defective flowers or no pollination • High temps (>40oC) (104oF) may cause fruit drop in Navel Oranges.

  30. Physiological Drop • 2nd drop - May - June NL • ( Nov-Dec SL) • Fruitlets 0.5 - 2.0 cm • Caused - competition for metabolites • High temps. ® H2O stress ® stomatal closure ® assim CO2¯ • Neg. C balance ® fruit abscission

  31. Longevity • Freezes primary cause of short life. • Aside from freezes: • Humid subtrop - fruit in 15-20 yrs • Med. Climates - peak 20-25 yrs • Humid subtrop - life 100 years • Mediterranean - life 200 years

  32. Fruit Yields • FL av grapefruit 41 max 120 Mg ha-1 • Oranges 31 Mg max 100 Mg ha-1 • Brazil and China 1/2 - lack irrigation • Semiarid or arid - < hu < tree size < yield. • % marketable fruit > in semiarid area • < pests, < blemishes & > peel color

  33. Fruit Growth • Sigmoid pattern (Fig. 3.7) • Phase I - Cell div. (all cells formed) • 1 - 1.5 mo - determines fruit size • Phase II - Cell differentiation • Phase III - Cell enlargement (6 mo)

  34. Maturation • Phase IV - Peel color from green to yellow or orange • Slight increase in TSS • Rapid decrease in TA • Time 6 - 16 months for ‘Valencia’ • Influenced by water and temp.

  35. External Quality • Peel color (air & soil temps < 15oC) • Chloroplasts ® Chromoplasts • Carotenoids (grapefruit) • Lycopenes (red grapefruit) • Anthocyanin (blood oranges) • Low vigor ® more color • Excessive N ® poor color

  36. Fruit Shape • High temperatures ® sheepnosed fruit • Excessive cell division in albedo near stem end.

  37. Fruit Size • Citrus 85 - 90% water by weight • Fruit size function of water • Leaves on detached fruitless twig wilt in few hrs • Leaves on detached fruited twig remain turgid for many hours • WHY?

  38. Water translocated to leaves is stored in fruit peel • Irrigation scheduling

  39. Internal Quality • Carbohydrates 75 - 80% of TSS • Regulates internal quality • TSS decrease > rapid - low tropical than in sub-tropical areas (Fig. 3.8) • TA - same relation (Fig. 3.9) • Function of heat units • Organic acids in Citric acid cycle

  40. TSS:TA Ratio • Determines edible quality • ‘Valencia’ reach 9:1 in 7 mo in tropics • Coastal subtropics - up to 16 mo • (Fig. 3.10)

  41. THE END

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