Articles
EFFECT OF APPLICATION DATE OF REST BREAKING AGENTS ON GROWTH AND PRODUCTION OF ‘ROYAL GALA’ AND ‘GRANNY SMITH’ APPLE
Article number
940_69
Pages
483 – 489
Language
English
Abstract
The efficacy of chemical Rest Breaking Agents (RBAs), used to reduce the negative effects of insufficient winter chilling, depends on application date, concentra¬tion, chemistry and cultivar.
As environmental concerns increasingly limit the use of agricultural chemicals, RBAs must be applied more efficiently.
The depth of dormancy during RBA application was determined by the rate of bud break of one-year-old shoots forced at 25°C. Shoots were excised six times during August and September 2008 and 2009 from mature Royal Gala (RG) and Granny Smith (GS) apple trees.
During 2008, these same trees, on the same six occasions, were treated with either DormexR/oil (0.5%/3% v/v), LiftR (3% v/v), SymphonyR (½ and ¼ volume). During 2009, the same trees were again treated with the same RBAs except Oil (5% v/v) replaced Symphony (¼ volume). Control trees were left untreated.
Bud break (BB) on one-year-old pre-marked shoots and yield/tree were recorded during both seasons.
Depth of dormancy varied with cultivar and season and had little effect on BB caused by the RBA. DormexR/oil and LiftR increased bud break of RG but application date had no effect.
RBAs applied during early August in both seasons increased yield of larger, redder RG fruit, but no treatment increased total yield.
Bud break of GS was increased by DormexR/oil and LiftR applied during early September.
Neither RBA nor application date influenced GS yield during both seasons.
As environmental concerns increasingly limit the use of agricultural chemicals, RBAs must be applied more efficiently.
The depth of dormancy during RBA application was determined by the rate of bud break of one-year-old shoots forced at 25°C. Shoots were excised six times during August and September 2008 and 2009 from mature Royal Gala (RG) and Granny Smith (GS) apple trees.
During 2008, these same trees, on the same six occasions, were treated with either DormexR/oil (0.5%/3% v/v), LiftR (3% v/v), SymphonyR (½ and ¼ volume). During 2009, the same trees were again treated with the same RBAs except Oil (5% v/v) replaced Symphony (¼ volume). Control trees were left untreated.
Bud break (BB) on one-year-old pre-marked shoots and yield/tree were recorded during both seasons.
Depth of dormancy varied with cultivar and season and had little effect on BB caused by the RBA. DormexR/oil and LiftR increased bud break of RG but application date had no effect.
RBAs applied during early August in both seasons increased yield of larger, redder RG fruit, but no treatment increased total yield.
Bud break of GS was increased by DormexR/oil and LiftR applied during early September.
Neither RBA nor application date influenced GS yield during both seasons.
Authors
M.S. North, K. de Kock, N. Cook, L. Allderman, M. Booyse
Keywords
bud break, delayed foliation, dormancy, growth stimulants, Malus domestica
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