Dry matter partitioning of ‘Nocellara del Belice’ olive (Olea europaea L.) trees was assessed during one growing season. Four three-year-old potted trees from rooted cuttings trained to single-trunk free-canopy were destructively harvested at 30-day intervals during the growing season. The average dry matter increase was about 2 kg · year-1 per tree. Total plant dry weight increased linearly over the year, whereas root to shoot ratio followed a quadratic trend with its peak during winter. Dry matter of all canopy parts (trunk, branches, 1-year-old shoots, and leaves) increased linearly and leaves exhibited the fastest growth. Also fine roots accumulated dry matter over the year in a linear fashion, whereas dry matter of coarse roots increased until the end of January and then leveled off. On the average, 31% of the total dry mass was partitioned to the roots (20% coarse and 11% fine), 28% to the leaves, 14% to shoot axes, 7% to two-years-old wood, and 14% to main trunk. Trunk cross-sectional area was positively related to both root and shoot dry weight, and proves to be a good indicator of above- and below-ground vegetative growth in young olive trees.
SCARIANO L, POLICARPO M, LO BIANCO R, DI MARCO L (2008). Dynamics of dry matter partitioning in young ‘Nocellara del Belice’ olive trees. In Acta Horticolturae (pp.397-401). ANKARA : M.T. Özkaya et al..
Dynamics of dry matter partitioning in young ‘Nocellara del Belice’ olive trees
POLICARPO, Michelangelo;LO BIANCO, Riccardo;DI MARCO, Luigi
2008-01-01
Abstract
Dry matter partitioning of ‘Nocellara del Belice’ olive (Olea europaea L.) trees was assessed during one growing season. Four three-year-old potted trees from rooted cuttings trained to single-trunk free-canopy were destructively harvested at 30-day intervals during the growing season. The average dry matter increase was about 2 kg · year-1 per tree. Total plant dry weight increased linearly over the year, whereas root to shoot ratio followed a quadratic trend with its peak during winter. Dry matter of all canopy parts (trunk, branches, 1-year-old shoots, and leaves) increased linearly and leaves exhibited the fastest growth. Also fine roots accumulated dry matter over the year in a linear fashion, whereas dry matter of coarse roots increased until the end of January and then leveled off. On the average, 31% of the total dry mass was partitioned to the roots (20% coarse and 11% fine), 28% to the leaves, 14% to shoot axes, 7% to two-years-old wood, and 14% to main trunk. Trunk cross-sectional area was positively related to both root and shoot dry weight, and proves to be a good indicator of above- and below-ground vegetative growth in young olive trees.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.