Affiliation:
1. 1Department of Horticultural Sciences, Cornell University, New York State Agricultural Experiment Station, 412 East Main Street, Fredonia, NY 14063
2. 2University of Arkansas, Division of Agriculture, Institute of Food Science and Engineering, 2650 North Young Avenue, Fayetteville, AR 72704
Abstract
Four pruning techniques were evaluated from 1999 to 2003 in a commercial ‘Concord’ (Vitis labruscana) vineyard in Westfield, NY. Manual pruning, mechanical pruning with manual pruning follow-up, mechanical pruning with fruit thinning, and minimal pruning with fruit thinning averaged a 2.4-fold difference in retained nodes per vine. Treatments with crop adjustment required fruit thinning in 3 of 5 years to maintain an acceptable crop size. Manually pruned vines, mechanically pruned vines with manual follow-up pruning, and mechanically pruned vines with crop adjustment had similar yields, juice soluble solids, lignified periderm, juice color, juice titratable acidity, and juice pH in 4 of 5 years. Minimally pruned vines tended to have slightly higher yield and lower juice soluble solids, color, and titratable acidity in 3 of 5 years. Pruning system cost estimates indicated a 56% and 80% cost reduction per acre when comparing manual pruning with mechanical pruning plus manual follow-up or mechanical pruning plus mechanical fruit thinning, respectively. These results support two commercially acceptable and sustainable pruning management options for New York ‘Concord’ grape production.
Publisher
American Society for Horticultural Science
Cited by
20 articles.
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