TY - JOUR T1 - Effect of Irrigation on Changes in Berry Composition of Tempranillo During Maturation. Sugars, Organic Acids, and Mineral Elements JF - American Journal of Enology and Viticulture JO - Am J Enol Vitic. SP - 418 LP - 434 DO - 10.5344/ajev.1999.50.4.418 VL - 50 IS - 4 AU - Ma A. Esteban AU - Ma J. Villanueva AU - J. R. Lissarrague Y1 - 1999/01/01 UR - http://www.ajevonline.org/content/50/4/418.abstract N2 - The impact of water availability on the yield and must composition of Vitis vinifera L. cv. Tempranillo grapes was studied over a three-year period. Grape juice composition was compared during stages II and III of the berry growth. The object of this study was to ascertain the effect of irrigation regime on berry development and ripening, and hence on grape juice quality. Changes in berry weight, °Brix, glucose, fructose, titratable acidity, pH, tartaric acid, malic acid, citric acid, and mineral elements were monitored. The evolution of sugars and acids during berry growth followed patterns similar to those reported by previous investigators. Hence, water availability did not affect the accumulation patterns of the different sugars and acids. Glucose was the predominant sugar in the berries at veraison, while fructose predominated at the end of ripening, irrespective of the treatment applied. Organic acid concentration was highest when berries were pea-sized, and it began to decrease at veraison. The rate of decrease was greater for malic acid than for tartaric acid. The concentration of tartaric acid was higher than that of malic acid from veraison on, and differences between them increased as ripening progressed. The differences between malic acid and tartaric acid were greatest in the non-irrigated treatment. Total soluble solids, and the concentration of glucose and fructose were significantly higher in the irrigated vines than in the non-irrigated vines, mainly towards the end of ripening, except in 1992. In that year the values for the non-irrigated vines were slightly higher, though the differences were not significant on many sampling dates. The °Brix of the irrigated grapes at harvest were 2.8% to 14.9% higher than in the non-irrigated grapes. The largest increase in °Brix (67% - 124% in non-irrigated grapes and 58% -117% in the irrigated grapes) took place after veraison. Titratable acidity (TA) was significantly higher for the irrigated vines, primarily at the end of ripening. The TA of irrigated vines at harvest was 9.8% to 28.3% higher than the TA for non-irrigated vines. By expressing the data for glucose, fructose, tartaric acid, malic acid, and citric acid in grams per berry, we observed the largest number of sampling dates with significant differences between irrigation treatments in the years 1990 and 1992. The concentrations for the mineral elements followed differing trends over the course of ripening. Potassium increased until harvest time, and calcium and magnesium decreased, but sodium did not exhibit any clear trend, rising or falling on different sampling dates. Quantitatively, the values for all the parameters studied in the non-irrigated vines tended to be equal to or greater than those in the irrigated vines, even though per-berry quantities were higher in the irrigated vines. The results show that the effect of water deficits on the composition of the grape juice was more intense in the final year of the study, when the differences in soil water availability between treatments were greatest. The results further suggest that the higher yields in irrigated vines did not have any adverse effect on grape must composition and hence on grape juice quality, because on the whole synthesis and accumulation processes were able to offset any dilution effects. ER -