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Early morning fluctuations in trunk diameter are highly sensitive to water stress in nectarine trees

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Early morning fluctuations in trunk diameter are highly sensitive to water stress in nectarine trees. / de la Rosa, Jose M.; Dodd, Ian Charles; Domingo, Rafael et al.
In: Irrigation Science, 03.2016, p. 117-128.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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de la Rosa JM, Dodd IC, Domingo R, Perez-Pastor A. Early morning fluctuations in trunk diameter are highly sensitive to water stress in nectarine trees. Irrigation Science. 2016 Mar;117-128. Epub 2016 Jan 20. doi: 10.1007/s00271-016-0491-y

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de la Rosa, Jose M. ; Dodd, Ian Charles ; Domingo, Rafael et al. / Early morning fluctuations in trunk diameter are highly sensitive to water stress in nectarine trees. In: Irrigation Science. 2016 ; pp. 117-128.

Bibtex

@article{cc6987b1ae08418d993996b21a12f60e,
title = "Early morning fluctuations in trunk diameter are highly sensitive to water stress in nectarine trees",
abstract = "The sensitivity to water stress of different plant water status indicators was evaluated during two consecutive years in early nectarine trees grown in a semi-arid region. Measurements were made post-harvest and two irrigation treatments were applied: a control treatment (CTL), irrigated at 120 % of crop evapotranspiration demand to achieve non-limiting water conditions, and a deficit irrigation treatment, that applied around 37 % less water than CTL during late postharvest. The plant water status indicators evaluated were midday stem water potential (Ψstem) and indices derived from trunk diameter fluctuations: maximum daily shrinkage (MDS), trunk daily growth rate, early daily shrinkage measured between 0900 and 1200 hours solar time (EDS), and late daily shrinkage that occurred between 1200 hours solar time and the moment that minimum trunk diameter was reached (typically 1600 hours solar time). The most sensitive [highest ratio of signal intensity (SI) to noise] indices to water stress were Ψstem and EDS. The SI of EDS was greater than that of Ψstem, although with greater variability. EDS was a better index than MDS, with higher SI and similar variability. Although MDS was linearly related to Ψstem down to −1.5 MPa, it decreased thereafter with increasing water stress. In contrast, EDS was linearly related to Ψstem, although the slope of the regression decreased as the season progressed, as in the case of MDS. Further studies are needed to determine whether EDS is a sensitive index of water stress in a range of species.",
author = "{de la Rosa}, {Jose M.} and Dodd, {Ian Charles} and Rafael Domingo and Alejandro Perez-Pastor",
year = "2016",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1007/s00271-016-0491-y",
language = "English",
pages = "117--128",
journal = "Irrigation Science",
issn = "0342-7188",
publisher = "Springer Verlag",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Early morning fluctuations in trunk diameter are highly sensitive to water stress in nectarine trees

AU - de la Rosa, Jose M.

AU - Dodd, Ian Charles

AU - Domingo, Rafael

AU - Perez-Pastor, Alejandro

PY - 2016/3

Y1 - 2016/3

N2 - The sensitivity to water stress of different plant water status indicators was evaluated during two consecutive years in early nectarine trees grown in a semi-arid region. Measurements were made post-harvest and two irrigation treatments were applied: a control treatment (CTL), irrigated at 120 % of crop evapotranspiration demand to achieve non-limiting water conditions, and a deficit irrigation treatment, that applied around 37 % less water than CTL during late postharvest. The plant water status indicators evaluated were midday stem water potential (Ψstem) and indices derived from trunk diameter fluctuations: maximum daily shrinkage (MDS), trunk daily growth rate, early daily shrinkage measured between 0900 and 1200 hours solar time (EDS), and late daily shrinkage that occurred between 1200 hours solar time and the moment that minimum trunk diameter was reached (typically 1600 hours solar time). The most sensitive [highest ratio of signal intensity (SI) to noise] indices to water stress were Ψstem and EDS. The SI of EDS was greater than that of Ψstem, although with greater variability. EDS was a better index than MDS, with higher SI and similar variability. Although MDS was linearly related to Ψstem down to −1.5 MPa, it decreased thereafter with increasing water stress. In contrast, EDS was linearly related to Ψstem, although the slope of the regression decreased as the season progressed, as in the case of MDS. Further studies are needed to determine whether EDS is a sensitive index of water stress in a range of species.

AB - The sensitivity to water stress of different plant water status indicators was evaluated during two consecutive years in early nectarine trees grown in a semi-arid region. Measurements were made post-harvest and two irrigation treatments were applied: a control treatment (CTL), irrigated at 120 % of crop evapotranspiration demand to achieve non-limiting water conditions, and a deficit irrigation treatment, that applied around 37 % less water than CTL during late postharvest. The plant water status indicators evaluated were midday stem water potential (Ψstem) and indices derived from trunk diameter fluctuations: maximum daily shrinkage (MDS), trunk daily growth rate, early daily shrinkage measured between 0900 and 1200 hours solar time (EDS), and late daily shrinkage that occurred between 1200 hours solar time and the moment that minimum trunk diameter was reached (typically 1600 hours solar time). The most sensitive [highest ratio of signal intensity (SI) to noise] indices to water stress were Ψstem and EDS. The SI of EDS was greater than that of Ψstem, although with greater variability. EDS was a better index than MDS, with higher SI and similar variability. Although MDS was linearly related to Ψstem down to −1.5 MPa, it decreased thereafter with increasing water stress. In contrast, EDS was linearly related to Ψstem, although the slope of the regression decreased as the season progressed, as in the case of MDS. Further studies are needed to determine whether EDS is a sensitive index of water stress in a range of species.

U2 - 10.1007/s00271-016-0491-y

DO - 10.1007/s00271-016-0491-y

M3 - Journal article

SP - 117

EP - 128

JO - Irrigation Science

JF - Irrigation Science

SN - 0342-7188

ER -