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Deficit irrigation affects seasonal changes in leaf physiology and oil quality of Olea europaea (cultivars Frantoio and Leccino) (Articolo in rivista)
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- Deficit irrigation affects seasonal changes in leaf physiology and oil quality of Olea europaea (cultivars Frantoio and Leccino) (Articolo in rivista) (literal)
- Anno
- 2007-01-01T00:00:00+01:00 (literal)
- Alternative label
Tognetti R., dAndria R., R. Sacchi, G. Morelli, A. Alvino (2007)
Deficit irrigation affects seasonal changes in leaf physiology and oil quality of Olea europaea (cultivars Frantoio and Leccino)
in Annals of Applied Biology
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- Tognetti R., dAndria R., R. Sacchi, G. Morelli, A. Alvino (literal)
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- ISI Web of Science (WOS) (literal)
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- Tognetti R. (Università del Molise)
Sacchi R. (Università di Napoli Federico II)
Alvino A. (Università del Molise) (literal)
- Titolo
- Deficit irrigation affects seasonal changes in leaf physiology and oil quality of Olea europaea (cultivars Frantoio and Leccino) (literal)
- Abstract
- The olive tree is a traditionally nonirrigated crop that occupies quite an extensive
agricultural area inMediterranean-type agroecosystems.Improvements inwateruse
efficiency of crops are essential under the scenarios of water scarcity predicted
by global change models for the Mediterranean region. Recently, irrigation has
been introduced to increase the low land productivity, but there is little information
on ecophysiological aspects and quality features intended for a sagacious use
of water, while being of major importance for the achievement of high-quality
products as olive oil. Therefore, deficit irrigation programmes were developed to
improvewater-use efficiency, crop productivity and quality in a subhumid zone of
Southern Italy with good winter-spring precipitation. The response of mature
olive trees to deficit irrigation in deep soils was studied on cultivars Frantoio and
Leccino by examining atmospheric environment and soilmoisture, gas exchange
and plant water status, as well as oil yield and chemical analysis. Trees were not
irrigated (rainfed) or subjected to irrigation at 66%and 100%of crop evapotranspiration
(ETC), starting from pit hardening to early fruit veraison. Improvements
in the photosynthetic capacity induced by increasing soil water availability were
only of minor importance. However, plant water status was positively influenced
by deficit irrigation, with 66% and 100% of ETC treatments hardly differing
from one another though consistently diverging from rainfed plants. The
effect of water stress on photosynthesis was mainly dependent on diffusion resistances
in response to soil moisture. Leccino showed higher instantaneous
water-use efficiency than Frantoio. Crop yield increased proportionally to the
amount of seasonal water volume, confirming differences between cultivars in
water-use efficiency. The unsaturated/saturated and the monounsaturated/
polyunsaturated fatty acid ratios of the oil also differed between cultivars, while
the watering regime had minor effects. Although irrigation can modify the
fatty acid profile, polyphenol contents were scarcely affected by the water
supply. Irrigation to 100% of ETC in the period August-September might be
advisable to (literal)
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