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2013 ASHS Annual Conference

14939:
Vine-row Groundcover Management Affects Pruning and Cluster Weights, Petiole C and N Content, and N Leachate in a New York Vineyard

Monday, July 22, 2013: 2:45 PM
Desert Salon 13-14 (Desert Springs J.W Marriott Resort )
Ian A. Merwin, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY
Rebecca Sirianni, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY
Justine Vanden Heuvel, Department of Horticultural Science, NYSAES, Cornell University, Geneva, NY
Michael Brown, Horticulture, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY
New York vineyards are often situated on fertile soils where excessive vine growth causes problems with high vigor and undesirable “green” flavors in red wine-grapes. We are comparing the effects of four vine-row groundcover management systems (GMS) on vine nutrient status, vine growth and yields, soil conditions, and nutrient leaching in a Finger Lakes ‘Cabernet Franc’ vineyard. Four GMS treatments were maintained in 1-m-wide strips beneath the vine rows: 1) native vegetation; 2) glyphosate herbicide; 3) white clover (Trifolium repens) seeded in May each year; and 4) mechanical cultivation. After two years of treatments, fruit yields, dormant pruning weights, cluster counts, and cluster weights were greater in glyphosate plots than in other treatments. Petiole C and N content were greatest in white clover plots, and soil N and K availability were greater in the glyphosate and white clover plots.  Subsoil N leaching was greater beneath white clover plots, while dissolved organic carbon leaching was greater in cultivated and glyphosate treated plots. Volumetric soil water content usually ranked glyphosate > cultivated > native vegetation > white clover during the growing season, but vine water potential was not closely correlated with soil water content even during a prolonged drought during 2012.