Grape Rootstock Response to Salinity, Water and Combined Salinity and Water Stresses

Diminishing availability of non-saline water in arid and semiarid regions is of concern to all irrigated agricultural producers, including wine and grape producers. Grapes are not a salt tolerant crop and producers often face the choice of either limiting fresh water application, using alternative s...

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Main Authors: Donald L. Suarez, Nydia Celis, Ray G. Anderson, Devinder Sandhu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-06-01
Series:Agronomy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/9/6/321
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spelling doaj-5ea2077f4d634097b83f6c1d8cba90a12021-04-02T14:48:08ZengMDPI AGAgronomy2073-43952019-06-019632110.3390/agronomy9060321agronomy9060321Grape Rootstock Response to Salinity, Water and Combined Salinity and Water StressesDonald L. Suarez0Nydia Celis1Ray G. Anderson2Devinder Sandhu3USDA-ARS, US Salinity Laboratory, Riverside, CA 92507, USAUSDA-ARS, US Salinity Laboratory, Riverside, CA 92507, USAUSDA-ARS, US Salinity Laboratory, Riverside, CA 92507, USAUSDA-ARS, US Salinity Laboratory, Riverside, CA 92507, USADiminishing availability of non-saline water in arid and semiarid regions is of concern to all irrigated agricultural producers, including wine and grape producers. Grapes are not a salt tolerant crop and producers often face the choice of either limiting fresh water application, using alternative saline waters or a combination of both. We examined the salt tolerance and effect of restricted water application on three purported salt tolerant rootstocks grafted to Cabernet Sauvignon scion in a 4-year replicated field experiment. ANOVA indicated significant effects of salinity water stress and rootstock on fruit yields. The 140 Ruggeri scion was the top producer across all treatments including control, followed by Salt Creek, with St. George significantly less productive than 140 Ruggeri across all treatments. In terms of salt tolerance, Salt Creek and 140 Ruggeri were not statistically different but St. George was significantly less tolerant than Salt Creek. In terms of drought tolerance (relative yield), there were no statistical differences among rootstocks. Soil salinity profiles and soil moisture sensors indicated reduced water consumption under high salinity, thus no matric stress under 60% of optimal water application when high salt stress was present. The multiplicative stress model where salt and water stress are individually evaluated did not satisfactorily predict yield under combined salinity and reduced water application, likely due to decreased water consumption under saline conditions. Short term (one year) experiments underestimate salt damage to grape vines as salt tolerance decreased over the 4-year experiment.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/9/6/321Salinitygrapesabiotic stresswinerootstocks
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Donald L. Suarez
Nydia Celis
Ray G. Anderson
Devinder Sandhu
spellingShingle Donald L. Suarez
Nydia Celis
Ray G. Anderson
Devinder Sandhu
Grape Rootstock Response to Salinity, Water and Combined Salinity and Water Stresses
Agronomy
Salinity
grapes
abiotic stress
wine
rootstocks
author_facet Donald L. Suarez
Nydia Celis
Ray G. Anderson
Devinder Sandhu
author_sort Donald L. Suarez
title Grape Rootstock Response to Salinity, Water and Combined Salinity and Water Stresses
title_short Grape Rootstock Response to Salinity, Water and Combined Salinity and Water Stresses
title_full Grape Rootstock Response to Salinity, Water and Combined Salinity and Water Stresses
title_fullStr Grape Rootstock Response to Salinity, Water and Combined Salinity and Water Stresses
title_full_unstemmed Grape Rootstock Response to Salinity, Water and Combined Salinity and Water Stresses
title_sort grape rootstock response to salinity, water and combined salinity and water stresses
publisher MDPI AG
series Agronomy
issn 2073-4395
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Diminishing availability of non-saline water in arid and semiarid regions is of concern to all irrigated agricultural producers, including wine and grape producers. Grapes are not a salt tolerant crop and producers often face the choice of either limiting fresh water application, using alternative saline waters or a combination of both. We examined the salt tolerance and effect of restricted water application on three purported salt tolerant rootstocks grafted to Cabernet Sauvignon scion in a 4-year replicated field experiment. ANOVA indicated significant effects of salinity water stress and rootstock on fruit yields. The 140 Ruggeri scion was the top producer across all treatments including control, followed by Salt Creek, with St. George significantly less productive than 140 Ruggeri across all treatments. In terms of salt tolerance, Salt Creek and 140 Ruggeri were not statistically different but St. George was significantly less tolerant than Salt Creek. In terms of drought tolerance (relative yield), there were no statistical differences among rootstocks. Soil salinity profiles and soil moisture sensors indicated reduced water consumption under high salinity, thus no matric stress under 60% of optimal water application when high salt stress was present. The multiplicative stress model where salt and water stress are individually evaluated did not satisfactorily predict yield under combined salinity and reduced water application, likely due to decreased water consumption under saline conditions. Short term (one year) experiments underestimate salt damage to grape vines as salt tolerance decreased over the 4-year experiment.
topic Salinity
grapes
abiotic stress
wine
rootstocks
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/9/6/321
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AT nydiacelis graperootstockresponsetosalinitywaterandcombinedsalinityandwaterstresses
AT rayganderson graperootstockresponsetosalinitywaterandcombinedsalinityandwaterstresses
AT devindersandhu graperootstockresponsetosalinitywaterandcombinedsalinityandwaterstresses
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