Abstract

Rainfed olive groves have been traditionally tilled in order to reduce the competition for water and nutrients. In sloping Mediterranean olive groves, this practice leads to high erosion rates, resulting in a reduction in soil fertility. Cover crops have been employed as a sustainable olive grove management strategy, but previous studies found differences in their effect on fruit load and there is scarce information on their influence on the virgin olive oil (VOO) quality. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of different soil management strategies on olive and oil yield and VOO physicochemical and sensory characteristics in a rainfed olive grove (238 trees·ha−1) of Cornicabra cultivar, the main in Central Spain. No effect of soil management was found in olive or oil yield along three cropping seasons. VOO quality was mainly influenced by the year, but slight differences were found in the driest year between the studied treatments. Small differences in fruit ripening, pigments, and several fatty acids as well as in sensory parameters were found.

Highlights

  • Olive tree (Olea europaea L.) is one of the most droughttolerant tree crops in the world [1]

  • Reference evapotranspiration (ET0) values were similar among the three years: 1209, 1217, and 1218 in 2011, 2012, and 2013, respectively

  • Our results support the adoption of cover crops as sustainable management of rainfed olive groves in Central Spain in the drought-tolerant cultivar Cornicabra

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Summary

Introduction

Olive tree (Olea europaea L.) is one of the most droughttolerant tree crops in the world [1] They are able to tolerate low availability of soil water by means of morphological and physiological adaptation [2, 3]. Around 50% out of 2,500,000 ha of olive groves in Spain is tilled [11] to avoid weed competition for water and nutrients, in order to increase olive tree yield. This conventional practice gives rise to a large area of bare soil that is prone to erosion processes, one of the most important land degradation driving processes in Mediterranean areas [12, 13]

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