Abstract

A study was undertaken in order to quantify the effects of rootstock and irrigation level on the rooting pattern of fertigated apple trees. A profile trench observation method was used to map the number and location of root intersections at two planes relative to drip emitters for NP-fertigated McIntosh apple trees (Malus domestica Borkh). Four replicates of all combinations of three rootstocks (M.9, M.26 and M.7, planted in 1990) and two irrigation treatments [F1 (daily, watered to field capacity) and F2 (weekly, watered to 50% available soil water capacity, imposed in 1991)] were investigated after the 1994 growing season. Dwarfing rootstocks and F2-irrigation had lower top vigour and yield per tree. Cumulative yield efficiency was greater for trees on dwarfing rootstock but was unaffected by irrigation treatment. Root numbers per observation plane paralleled rootstock vigour, being lowest for M.9 and greatest for M.7. No effect of irrigation on root number was observed. Root distribution was affected by an interaction between rootstock and irrigation treatment with average root location moving closer to the surface and emitter for the dwarfing rootstocks M.9 and M.26 but not for M.7 under F1-irrigation. Key words: Vigour, yield, drip emitter, root number and distribution

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