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Articles

Unifying concepts for understanding fruit trees

Article number
1366_5
Pages
45 – 52
Language
English
Abstract
Anyone who observes fruit trees may wonder how or why they behave in specific ways.
Some trees grow upright while others have a spreading habit.
Some produce many flowers and small immature fruit only to drop most of the fruit later on; others grow more strongly on their sunny side than their shady side.
It is common to ascribe such behavior to the tree as a whole and state that trees preferentially “allocate” resources to specific organs.
A large amount of research has been conducted to understand how plant hormones provide this control.
However, this is the wrong approach to understanding tree functioning and behavior.
Trees are not in control of what they do.
What trees do and how they function is shaped by the individual organs that make up the tree, not by the tree as a whole.
The genetic code only indirectly determines the habit, structure and behavior of a tree by defining the behavioral and functional limits of the component organs, tissues and cells.
Unlike animals that have a mechanism for collective control of the whole organism – a central nervous system – trees (and plants in general) are more appropriately considered as collections of semi-autonomous organs.
These organs are dependent on one another for resources, such as water, energy and nutrients, but control their own destiny.
This paper will briefly summarize evidence for how these concepts guide the growth and productivity of fruit trees.

Publication
Authors
T.M. DeJong
Keywords
fruit tree growth, dry matter partitioning, source-sink relations, carbohydrate storage, tree modeling
Full text
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