Modulation of the Irrigation Practices in Croatia for More Sustainable Olive Growing

Author:

Šikić Zoran1ORCID,Marcelić Šime1ORCID,Brkić Bubola Karolina2ORCID,Jukić Špika Maja34ORCID,Gašparović Pinto Ana1ORCID,Zorica Marko1ORCID,Kolega Šimun1ORCID,Pasković Igor25ORCID,Novoselić Anja2ORCID,Klisović Dora2ORCID,Kos Tomislav1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology, Agronomy and Aquaculture, University of Zadar, Square of Prince Višeslav 9, HR-23000 Zadar, Croatia

2. Department of Agriculture and Nutrition, Institute of Agriculture and Tourism, Karla Huguesa 8, HR-52440 Poreč, Croatia

3. Department of Applied Sciences, Institute for Adriatic Crops and Karst Reclamation, Put Duilova 11, HR-21000 Split, Croatia

4. Centre of Excellence for Biodiversity and Molecular Plant Breeding (CoE CroP-BioDiv), Svetošimunska Cesta 25, HR-10000 Zagreb, Croatia

5. Faculty of Health Studies, University of Rijeka, Viktora Cara Emina 5, HR-51000 Rijeka, Croatia

Abstract

Olive groves in the Mediterranean may lose production sustainability because of their vulnerability to climatic change. Irrigation is an important measure that could significantly affect fruit yield, olive fruit fly infestation, and oil characteristics. The aim of paper was to compare the regulated deficit irrigation with different water management practices, in consecutive years, in two locations in Zadar County (Croatia), affecting fruit morphology, olive fruit fly infestation, and quantity and quality of the extracted Coratina cultivar oil. Treatments, namely C—rainfed, T1—deficit irrigation (produce’s practice), T2—regulated deficit irrigation, and T3—full irrigation (100% ECTO), were established. Irrigated treatments had a positive effect on all morphological characteristics of the fruit. The pulp mass, independently of the year, increased in irrigated treatment (ranging from 1.04 to 1.65 in C to 2.25 and 2.30 in the irrigated treatments) and resulted in a higher oil content on a fresh weight basis (ranging from 16.39% to 17.85% in C to 19.48% to 23.26% in the irrigated treatments). However, fruit yield per tree was only location-dependent. When olive fruit fly presence was high, fruit infestation was greatest in the irrigated compared to the rainfed treatment. According to quality parameters, all oils were classified as EVOO. Individual phenols were influenced by irrigation, while the composition of fatty acids was more influenced by location than treatment. The sensory characteristics of the resulting oil were slightly reduced compared to rainfed treatment. The results indicate that regulated deficit irrigation benefits water use sustainability without compromising the quality of the oil.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Agronomy and Crop Science,Food Science

Reference101 articles.

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