PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Markus Keller AU - Lynn J. Mills AU - Mercy A. Olmstead TI - Fruit Ripening Has Little Influence on Grapevine Cold Acclimation AID - 10.5344/ajev.2014.14042 DP - 2014 Dec 01 TA - American Journal of Enology and Viticulture PG - 417--423 VI - 65 IP - 4 4099 - http://www.ajevonline.org/content/65/4/417.short 4100 - http://www.ajevonline.org/content/65/4/417.full SO - Am J Enol Vitic.2014 Dec 01; 65 AB - This four-year study tested whether the physiological demand of fruit ripening may interfere with grapevine cold acclimation in autumn or with midwinter hardiness. Three harvest time treatments were established in a mature vineyard of own-rooted Cabernet Sauvignon vines: clusters were removed after fruit set, at veraison, or after the first fall frost. Average yield of the late harvested vines varied from 4.2 to 5.1 kg/vine (7.5 to 9.2 t/ha) among years, and soluble solids varied from 23.4 to 25.6 Brix. The presence of fruit during ripening delayed leaf senescence, measured as chlorophyll decline. The fruit also tended to delay the senescence-associated decrease in photosynthesis. All vines showed typical patterns of autumn cold acclimation, midwinter hardiness, and spring deacclimation. Cold hardiness of buds, cane phloem, and cane xylem varied during winter depending on prevailing temperature, and during the coldest winter reached levels of −27°C for 50% bud damage and −28°C for the onset of xylem injury. Early fruit removal had no effect on cane nonstructural carbohydrates and, with few exceptions, failed to enhance cold hardiness. Depending on the year, early fruit removal improved bud hardiness on 5 to 15% and xylem hardiness on 8 to 38% of all measurement dates. On those dates, the early harvested vines tended to be 1 to 2°C hardier than the late harvested vines, irrespective of the time of crop removal. No trend was found for phloem hardiness. These results indicate that cropping, at least within commercially acceptable limits in regions with sufficiently long or warm growing seasons, rarely impacts cold acclimation and maximum hardiness. Grapevines appear to adjust seasonal leaf physiology to meet their carbon demand for both fruit ripening and cold acclimation.