4.2 Article

Seasonal changes in dendrometer-derived stem variation in apple trees grown in temperate climate

Journal

INTERNATIONAL AGROPHYSICS
Volume 36, Issue 4, Pages 245-255

Publisher

POLISH ACAD SCIENCES, INST AGROPHYSICS
DOI: 10.31545/intagr/152037

Keywords

maximum daily shrinkage; phase duration; contraction; recovery; stem radial increment

Categories

Funding

  1. PRIMA initiative of Members States, Associated Countries and Participating Countries [01DH21016]
  2. BMWK (Bundesministerium fur Wirtschaft und Klimaschutz), Berlin
  3. German funding agency: DLR (Deutsche Zentrum fur Luftund Raumfahrt e. V.), Bonn

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Studies have shown that tree trunk diameter changes are closely related to meteorological variables, and the durations of seasonal trunk contraction, recovery, and growth phases vary with changes in water vapour pressure deficit.
Studies of daily changes in tree trunk diameter provide valuable information concerning growth patterns and their relationships with varying environmental conditions. To date, very few experiments with fruit trees evaluated the effects of climate variation on trunk shrinkage and the duration of the contraction and recovery phases and of growth. In this study, elec-tronic dendrometers continuously monitored trunk diameter and trunk water storage dynamics of drip-irrigated 'Gala' apple trees (Malus x domestica Borkh.) during three growing seasons, which differed significantly in temperature, precipitation, air humidity and solar irradiation. It was found that trunk diameter and mete-orological variables were closely related, even when excluding the effects of soil water limitations. During each growing season, the durations of the daily contraction phase began to increase with increasing water vapour partial pressure deficit, and decreased again in autumn, when vapour partial pressure decreased. Throughout the season, the duration of the growth phase tended to change inversely to that of both contraction and recovery phase. The relationship between maximum trunk shrinkage and vapour partial pressure was higher post than preharvest for all years stud-ied. The duration of contraction, recovery, and growth phases may provide valuable information concerning seasonal changes and environmental drivers of water storage dynamics in apple trees.

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