TY - JOUR
T1 - Simulated fire injury
T2 - effects of trunk girdling and partial defoliation on reproductive development of apple trees (Malus domestica)
AU - Rossouw, Gerhard C.
AU - Idowu, Oluyoye
AU - Gregson, Aphrika
AU - Holzapfel, Bruno P.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2024/8/17
Y1 - 2024/8/17
N2 - Fire damage can significantly impact fruit productivity in orchards. However, the effects of nonlethal fire injuries on the reproductive development of apple trees remain poorly understood. To investigate these effects, we implemented three treatments: trunk girdling to simulate fire injury to xylem, defoliation of a third of the canopy (simulated crown fire injury), and a combined treatment (simulated surface fire injury), alongside a control. The experiment was conducted during the 2021–22 growing season using a randomised block design with four biological replicate plots. Girdling was less effective than crown and surface fire treatments in influencing fruit composition during the current growing season, and flowering and fruiting in the following season. The crown and surface fire treatments induced localised detrimental effects on fruit sugar and titratable acidity while stimulating peel blush. Additionally, these treatments led to reduced starch reserves by harvest, which likely disrupted subsequent flowering and crop load near the previously defoliated sections of the canopy. When surface fires damage leaves near the base of the canopy in addition to the trunk, fruit production in the lower part of the canopy is more likely to be compromised in the following season. Crown fires, which cause leaf loss near the apex of the canopy, appear to be particularly detrimental to tree productivity, as the top defoliation treatment impaired carbohydrate reserves in shoot terminals and roots. In conclusion, fire-induced loss of leaf area during fruit growth alters fruit composition in the current growing season and may lead to lower yields in the subsequent season.
AB - Fire damage can significantly impact fruit productivity in orchards. However, the effects of nonlethal fire injuries on the reproductive development of apple trees remain poorly understood. To investigate these effects, we implemented three treatments: trunk girdling to simulate fire injury to xylem, defoliation of a third of the canopy (simulated crown fire injury), and a combined treatment (simulated surface fire injury), alongside a control. The experiment was conducted during the 2021–22 growing season using a randomised block design with four biological replicate plots. Girdling was less effective than crown and surface fire treatments in influencing fruit composition during the current growing season, and flowering and fruiting in the following season. The crown and surface fire treatments induced localised detrimental effects on fruit sugar and titratable acidity while stimulating peel blush. Additionally, these treatments led to reduced starch reserves by harvest, which likely disrupted subsequent flowering and crop load near the previously defoliated sections of the canopy. When surface fires damage leaves near the base of the canopy in addition to the trunk, fruit production in the lower part of the canopy is more likely to be compromised in the following season. Crown fires, which cause leaf loss near the apex of the canopy, appear to be particularly detrimental to tree productivity, as the top defoliation treatment impaired carbohydrate reserves in shoot terminals and roots. In conclusion, fire-induced loss of leaf area during fruit growth alters fruit composition in the current growing season and may lead to lower yields in the subsequent season.
KW - Carbohydrate dynamics
KW - Defoliation
KW - Fruit maturation
KW - Girdling
KW - Orchard productivity
KW - Wildfires
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85201434853&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85201434853&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00468-024-02555-0
DO - 10.1007/s00468-024-02555-0
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85201434853
SN - 0931-1890
SP - 1323
EP - 1342
JO - Trees - Structure and Function
JF - Trees - Structure and Function
ER -