Abstract

There are considerable differences in chestnut yield and quality across different chestnut-producing regions in China, indicating that environmental factors affect these properties of chestnuts. Furthermore, nut yield and quality differ depending on canopy position. Therefore, this study investigated the relationship between the canopy microclimate, nut yield, and quality. We determined microclimate factors from blossoming to ripening at different positions in the canopy. Nut yield and quality and the number of different branch types were measured at various canopy positions. The light intensity and temperature of the different canopy layers exhibited funnel-form distributions ranging from 0 to 3600 μmol·m2·s−1 and from 32 to 37 °C, respectively. Canopy humidity showed an inverted funnel-shaped distribution ranging from 26% to 40%. Nut yield and quality in the top and outer canopies were higher than in the bottom and inner canopies. Branches in the top-middle and peripheral parts of the canopy also produced higher yields, especially strong branches that bore more nuts. Nut yield and quality had positive correlations with light intensity (r = 0.735) and temperature (r = 0.709), whereas they were inversely associated with humidity (r = −0.584). The nut yield was more than 200 gm−3 when the light intensity was above 1500 μmol·m2·s−1, the temperature was above 34.4 °C, and the humidity was below 27.5%.

Highlights

  • Chinese chestnut (Castanea mollissima Blume) is an important woody food crop in China, with its nuts containing sugar, starch, protein, fat, vitamins, and minerals [1]

  • Nut yield and quality improved as the canopy height increased and from the inner to outer canopy

  • A very significant difference in nut weight was observed between the outer canopy of the top layer and the inner canopy of the lower layer (p < 0.01)

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Summary

Introduction

Chinese chestnut (Castanea mollissima Blume) is an important woody food crop in China, with its nuts containing sugar, starch, protein, fat, vitamins, and minerals [1]. Chestnut quality is closely related to the cultivar [4,5], and different environmental factors in each area affect chestnut quality [6]. Chestnut quality is determined by the cultivar and the environment, such as light intensity, temperature, and precipitation. The different climates across China mean that chestnut production areas can be divided into six regions, including the Northeast region, the North region, the Northwest region, the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River region, the Southeast coastal region, and the Yunnan–Guizhou Plateau region.

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