Abstract

Two experiments were carried out in olive orchards in the center of Spain over a three-year period. In this cold and dry area, growers traditionally apply large amounts of N with no experimental knowledge. An ‘Arbequina’ hedgerow and ‘Picual’ vase orchards were fertilized with two N-doses applied to the soil in spring with or without the nitrification inhibitor (DMPP). Vegetative growth, fruit and oil characteristics were evaluated. These variables were affected by the N-treatment during the 3rd year. The lowest N-application increased vegetative growth, while when N-leaf composition was higher than 2%, fruit dry weight, oil content and oil phenol content were reduced. ‘Picual’ did not respond to N-applications. The effect of DMPP on growth or production was not consistent and a lower phenolic content was obtained for ‘Arbequina’. Our results demonstrated that in this dry land, N-fertilization is not always necessary and oil quality can be negatively affected with high doses.

Highlights

  • The olive (Olea europaea L.) is one of the most important crops in the Mediterranean regions

  • Before the 1950s traditional olive orchards in Spain established at low plant densities (< 100 trees per ha) did not receive any fertilizer application

  • In Spain fertilization has been based on traditional management by applying the same fertilization program every year, without considering nutritional soil reserves or plant requirements (Fernández-Escobar, 2010)

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Summary

Introduction

The olive (Olea europaea L.) is one of the most important crops in the Mediterranean regions. The perception that annual applications of significant amounts of N-fertilizer represent cheap insurance against the economic risks associated with insufficient N availability is common among growers. This caused many olive orchards to be fertilized in excess, applying N annually at rates that range from 9 to 350 kg·ha−1 (Fernández-Escobar et al, 1994). An excess of N-fertilization could cause nitrate pollution and increase frost and disease sensibility It could negatively affect oil quality (Fernández-Escobar et al, 2006) because of a decrease in polyphenols, which are the main antioxidants (Erel et al.,2013)

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