Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of new Ca sources sprayed on ‘Fuji Suprema’ and ‘Maxi Gala’ apple trees on nutrient levels in leaves and fruit, as well as on fruit ripening features and quality at harvest time and after cold storage. Experiments were carried out in a commercial orchard planted with ‘Fuji Suprema’ and ‘Maxi Gala’ apple trees in Caçador, Santa Catarina state, Brazil. Application of different Ca sources and untreated trees were evaluated in each experiment. Fruit were harvested at two different ripening stages and analyzed based on the following variables: fruit ripening at harvest time, as well as fruit quality and incidence of physiological disorders after 210-day storage at 1 °C. Calcium applications did not change Ca levels in the leaves and of the whole fruit. Calcium levels in fruit peel increased in cultivars Maxi Gala and Fuji Suprema due to leaf Ca applications. ‘Maxi Gala’ apples recorded higher postharvest incidence of physiological disorders, such as greater loss of fruit firmness than ‘Fuji Suprema’ apples (Due to 1-methylcyclopropene [1-MCP] application on ‘Fuji Suprema’ apples). Calcium applications did not change fruit maturation (starch index and pulp firmness) or apple pulp firmness preservation in both cultivars, although they reduced the incidence of bitter pit disorder in ‘Maxi Gala’ apples. The new sources of Ca tested did not increase Ca contents, nor did they reduced the risk for physiological disorder compared to the standard CaCl2 treatment that has been commercially used for decades as the main Ca fertilizer.

Highlights

  • Apple (Malus domestica Borkh.) crops cover more than 30,000 hectares in Brazil and produce approximately 1.2 million tons of fruit per year (IBGE 2018)

  • The new sources of Ca tested did not increase Ca contents, nor did they reduced the risk for physiological disorder compared to the standard CaCl2 treatment that has been commercially used for decades as the main Ca fertilizer

  • The new sources of Ca tested did not increase Ca contents, nor did they improve N/Ca or K + Mg/Ca ratios, nor did they reduced the risk for physiological disorder compared to the standard CaCl2 treatment that has been commercially used for decades as the main Ca fertilizer for apple trees

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Summary

Introduction

Apple (Malus domestica Borkh.) crops cover more than 30,000 hectares in Brazil and produce approximately 1.2 million tons of fruit per year (IBGE 2018). Rio Grande do Sul (RS) and Santa Catarina (SC) states are the largest apple producers in the country. Apple fruit is available to consumers throughout the year, mainly due to postharvest cold storage technologies. High fruit loss rate can be observed during cold storage due to incidence of diseases (rot) and physiological disorders such as bitter pit, cork spot and lenticellar depression, among others (Watkins and Mattheis 2019). Crop losses due to Ca deficiency-associated disorders such as bitter pit can be higher than 60% (Mattheis et al 2017)

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