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Effect of elevated temperature on the onset and rate of mesocarp cell death in berries of S hiraz and C hardonnay and its relationship with berry shrivel
Author(s) -
Bonada M.,
Sadras V.O.,
Fuentes S.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
australian journal of grape and wine research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.65
H-Index - 77
eISSN - 1755-0238
pISSN - 1322-7130
DOI - 10.1111/ajgw.12010
Subject(s) - berry , ripening , cultivar , horticulture , programmed cell death , context (archaeology) , biology , apoptosis , genetics , paleontology
Background and Aim Berry water loss at late stages of ripening is a cultivar dependent‐trait correlated with mesocarp cell death. We tested the hypothesis that elevated temperature anticipates the onset and increases the rate of mesocarp cell death. The implications of these putative effects on the time course of berry shrivel were also investigated. Methods and Results We assessed the progression of mesocarp cell vitality and the degree of shrivelling in berries from a factorial field experiment combining two thermal regimes (elevated temperature and control) and two cultivars ( S hiraz and C hardonnay). A bilinear model was used to objectively discriminate the onset of cell death and to quantify the rates of cell death before and after the inflection point in chronological and thermal scales. Elevated temperature advanced the onset of mesocarp cell death of berries and increased the rate of cell death in the period onset‐harvest for both cultivars. There was a close correlation between the proportion of living tissue and shrivel for S hiraz, but no shrivel was observed in C hardonnay despite significant mesocarp cell death. Conclusion Elevated temperature accelerated both mesocarp cell death and berry shrivelling in S hiraz and accelerated mesocarp cell death but had no impact on shrivel in C hardonnay. Mesocarp cell death seems necessary but not sufficient to explain berry shrivelling. Significance of the Study Understanding the functional links between berry shrivel and mesocarp cell death and their responses to environmental drivers would likely contribute to management practices that could reduce the severity of shrivel in a context of warmer conditions.

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