4.7 Article

Missing Links in Predicting Berry Sunburn in Future Vineyards

期刊

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
卷 12, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2021.715906

关键词

climate change; grapevine; heat; canopy architecture; light; functional-structural plant model

资金

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [449374897, 432888308]
  2. Fund of Geisenheim University

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Sunburn in grapevine berries is a recurring disorder that causes significant yield losses and quality decline. Understanding the transition from healthy to sunburnt berries is crucial and is driven by light-boosted local heat impact and past environments. Berry sunburn events are associated with heatwaves, indicating a link to climate change. Developing modeling frameworks that consider grapevine architecture and environmental conditions over time may help in mitigating sunburn risks in future vineyards.
Sunburn in grapevine berries is known as a recurring disorder causing severe yield losses and a decline in berry quality. The transition from healthy to sunburnt along a temporal trajectory is not fully understood. It is driven by light-boosted local heat impact and modulated by, e.g., past environments of the berry and its developmental state. Events of berry sunburn are often associated with heatwaves, indicating a link to climate change. In addition, the sensitivity of grapevine architecture to changing environmental condition indicates an urgent need to investigate and adapt mitigation strategies of berry sunburn in future vineyards. In this perspective, we want to identify missing links in predicting berry sunburn in vineyards and propose a modeling framework that may help us to investigate berry sunburn in future vineyards. For this, we propose to address open issues in both developing a model of berry sunburn and considering dynamic canopy growth, and canopy interaction with the environment and plant management such as shoot positioning or leaf removal. Because local environmental conditions drive sunburn, we aim at showing that identifying sunburn-reducing strategies in a vineyard under future environmental conditions can be supported by a modeling approach that integrates effects of management practices over time and takes grapevine architecture explicitly into account. We argue that functional-structural plant models may address such complex tasks. Once open issues are solved, they might be a promising tool to advance our knowledge on reducing risks of berry sunburn in silico.

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