Abstract

In rainy locations, sweet cherry is cultivated under plastic covers, which are useful to prevent fruit cracking but decrease cherry quality such as firmness and acidity. Here we evaluate the impact of pre-harvest K foliar applications on harvest and post-harvest fruit quality and condition of sweet cherry cultivated under plastic covers in southern Chile orchards. The study was performed on two commercial orchards (cv. Regina), located in different regions, during two consecutive seasons. In all cases, a conventional K regime (four sprays) was compared to an intensive K regimen (seven sprays). Results showed that cherries from the most southern region revealed lower acidity but higher soluble solids content weight and size. The intensive K regime improved the firmness and acidity of fruits of covered trees at harvest and post-harvest. Moreover, we found that condition defects were higher in fruits from un-covered trees and that trees grown under intensive K regime showed lower levels of cracking at harvest and pitting at post-harvest compared to trees treated with the conventional K regime. Otherwise, pedicel browning was inconsistently affected by K sprays. Our results revealed that an intensive K regime could improve the quality and condition of fruits at harvest and post-harvest in covered orchards of sweet cherry cv. Regina; however, the impacts can significantly vary depending on season and locality.

Highlights

  • Sweet cherry (Prunus avium L.) is one of the most important fruit crops cultivated in temperate climates

  • Our study showed that in the Perquenco orchard, in the 2018/2019 season, the size of fruits from trees treated with intensive K fertilization was larger (~0.5 mm) than fruits from trees grown under the conventional K regime, while non-differences for this parameter were observed in the 2020/2021 season

  • In agreement with those observed for fruit weight, the caliber of fruits harvested in Puerto Octay was greater compared to those of fruits from covered trees of Perquenco orchard; these differences were only detected during the 2020/2021 season, whereas non-differences among localities were observed in the 2019/2020 season (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Sweet cherry (Prunus avium L.) is one of the most important fruit crops cultivated in temperate climates. A strong increase in the production of sweet cherry orchards worldwide has occurred, especially in the last two decades, mainly due to high consumer demand and good grower returns [1]. As a result, this fruit crop has expanded even into regions where it has not been a conventional crop and where adverse weather conditions limit sweet cherry yield and quality. The production of sweet cherry in Chile increased from 41,000 to 234,000 tons between 2009 and 2019 In this same period, the country’s share of the world market has grown from.

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