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Establishing a Reference Baseline for Midday Stem Water Potential in Olive and Its Use for Plant-Based Irrigation Management

Midday stem water potential (SWP) is rapidly becoming adopted as a standard tool for plant-based irrigation management in many woody perennial crops. A reference or “baseline” SWP has been used in some crops (almond, prune, grape, and walnut) to account for the climatic influence of air vapor pressu...

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Autores principales: Shackel, Ken, Moriana, Alfonso, Marino, Giulia, Corell, Mireia, Pérez-López, David, Martin-Palomo, Maria Jose, Caruso, Tiziano, Marra, Francesco Paolo, Agüero Alcaras, Luis Martín, Milliron, Luke, Rosecrance, Richard, Fulton, Allan, Searles, Peter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8663634/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34899813
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2021.791711
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author Shackel, Ken
Moriana, Alfonso
Marino, Giulia
Corell, Mireia
Pérez-López, David
Martin-Palomo, Maria Jose
Caruso, Tiziano
Marra, Francesco Paolo
Agüero Alcaras, Luis Martín
Milliron, Luke
Rosecrance, Richard
Fulton, Allan
Searles, Peter
author_facet Shackel, Ken
Moriana, Alfonso
Marino, Giulia
Corell, Mireia
Pérez-López, David
Martin-Palomo, Maria Jose
Caruso, Tiziano
Marra, Francesco Paolo
Agüero Alcaras, Luis Martín
Milliron, Luke
Rosecrance, Richard
Fulton, Allan
Searles, Peter
author_sort Shackel, Ken
collection PubMed
description Midday stem water potential (SWP) is rapidly becoming adopted as a standard tool for plant-based irrigation management in many woody perennial crops. A reference or “baseline” SWP has been used in some crops (almond, prune, grape, and walnut) to account for the climatic influence of air vapor pressure deficit (VPD) on SWP under non-limiting soil moisture conditions. The baseline can be determined empirically for field trees maintained under such non-limiting conditions, but such conditions are difficult to achieve for an entire season. We present the results of an alternative survey-based approach, using a large set of SWP and VPD data collected over multiple years, from irrigation experiments in olive orchards located in multiple countries [Spain, United States (California), Italy, and Argentina]. The relation of SWP to midday VPD across the entire data set was consistent with an upper limit SWP which declined with VPD, with the upper limit being similar to that found in Prunus. A best fit linear regression estimate for this upper limit (baseline) was found by selecting the maximum R(2) and minimum probability for various upper fractions of the SWP/VPD relation. In addition to being surprisingly similar to the Prunus baseline, the olive baseline was also similar (within 0.1 MPa) to a recently published mechanistic olive soil-plant-atmosphere-continuum (SPAC) model for “super high density” orchard systems. Despite similarities in the baseline, the overall physiological range of SWP exhibited by olive extends to about −8 MPa, compared to about −4 MPa for economically producing almond. This may indicate that, despite species differences in physiological responses to low water availability (drought), there may be convergent adaptations/acclimations across species to high levels of water availability. Similar to its use in other crops, the olive baseline will enable more accurate and reproducible plant-based irrigation management for both full and deficit irrigation practices, and we present tentative SWP guidelines for this purpose.
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spelling pubmed-86636342021-12-11 Establishing a Reference Baseline for Midday Stem Water Potential in Olive and Its Use for Plant-Based Irrigation Management Shackel, Ken Moriana, Alfonso Marino, Giulia Corell, Mireia Pérez-López, David Martin-Palomo, Maria Jose Caruso, Tiziano Marra, Francesco Paolo Agüero Alcaras, Luis Martín Milliron, Luke Rosecrance, Richard Fulton, Allan Searles, Peter Front Plant Sci Plant Science Midday stem water potential (SWP) is rapidly becoming adopted as a standard tool for plant-based irrigation management in many woody perennial crops. A reference or “baseline” SWP has been used in some crops (almond, prune, grape, and walnut) to account for the climatic influence of air vapor pressure deficit (VPD) on SWP under non-limiting soil moisture conditions. The baseline can be determined empirically for field trees maintained under such non-limiting conditions, but such conditions are difficult to achieve for an entire season. We present the results of an alternative survey-based approach, using a large set of SWP and VPD data collected over multiple years, from irrigation experiments in olive orchards located in multiple countries [Spain, United States (California), Italy, and Argentina]. The relation of SWP to midday VPD across the entire data set was consistent with an upper limit SWP which declined with VPD, with the upper limit being similar to that found in Prunus. A best fit linear regression estimate for this upper limit (baseline) was found by selecting the maximum R(2) and minimum probability for various upper fractions of the SWP/VPD relation. In addition to being surprisingly similar to the Prunus baseline, the olive baseline was also similar (within 0.1 MPa) to a recently published mechanistic olive soil-plant-atmosphere-continuum (SPAC) model for “super high density” orchard systems. Despite similarities in the baseline, the overall physiological range of SWP exhibited by olive extends to about −8 MPa, compared to about −4 MPa for economically producing almond. This may indicate that, despite species differences in physiological responses to low water availability (drought), there may be convergent adaptations/acclimations across species to high levels of water availability. Similar to its use in other crops, the olive baseline will enable more accurate and reproducible plant-based irrigation management for both full and deficit irrigation practices, and we present tentative SWP guidelines for this purpose. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC8663634/ /pubmed/34899813 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2021.791711 Text en Copyright © 2021 Shackel, Moriana, Marino, Corell, Pérez-López, Martin-Palomo, Caruso, Marra, Agüero Alcaras, Milliron, Rosecrance, Fulton and Searles. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Plant Science
Shackel, Ken
Moriana, Alfonso
Marino, Giulia
Corell, Mireia
Pérez-López, David
Martin-Palomo, Maria Jose
Caruso, Tiziano
Marra, Francesco Paolo
Agüero Alcaras, Luis Martín
Milliron, Luke
Rosecrance, Richard
Fulton, Allan
Searles, Peter
Establishing a Reference Baseline for Midday Stem Water Potential in Olive and Its Use for Plant-Based Irrigation Management
title Establishing a Reference Baseline for Midday Stem Water Potential in Olive and Its Use for Plant-Based Irrigation Management
title_full Establishing a Reference Baseline for Midday Stem Water Potential in Olive and Its Use for Plant-Based Irrigation Management
title_fullStr Establishing a Reference Baseline for Midday Stem Water Potential in Olive and Its Use for Plant-Based Irrigation Management
title_full_unstemmed Establishing a Reference Baseline for Midday Stem Water Potential in Olive and Its Use for Plant-Based Irrigation Management
title_short Establishing a Reference Baseline for Midday Stem Water Potential in Olive and Its Use for Plant-Based Irrigation Management
title_sort establishing a reference baseline for midday stem water potential in olive and its use for plant-based irrigation management
topic Plant Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8663634/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34899813
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2021.791711
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