Abstract

The aim of this study was to assess the resistance to sour rot of twenty-eight valuable cultivars of grapevine for wine production and twenty-five cultivars of table grapevine with diverse geographic and genetic origins, and to explain the causes of varied resistance based on the features related to the morphology, biology and ecology of assessed genotypes. The study was conducted for six years in the grapevine field collection of the National Institute of Horticultural Research in Skierniewice (Poland, latitude 51.9627 N, longitude 20.1666 E). Sour rot was severe in three seasons with abundant rainfall during the berry ripening stage. The number of wine and table cultivars in particular classes of resistance (mean value for three years) was as follows: very little or little—9 (wine) and 9 (table), medium—9 (wine) and 3 (table), high or very high—10 (wine) and 13 (table). The severity of bunch sour rot was positively correlated with single berry weight (moderate or weak correlation), bunch density and single bunch weight (very weak or weak correlation), and negatively correlated with thickness of berry skin (strong correlation) and the time of the beginning of veraison (weak correlation). Cultivars that were characterized by such agrobiological and ecological features as easy detachment of the berry from the pedicel, sensitivity to berry skin cracking, frequent damage to the skin by insects, and sensitivity to sunburn, were more heavily exposed to sour rot.

Highlights

  • The severity of infestation, expressed as a percentage of cluster area with sour rot, was used to divide the varieties according to the resistance class to sour rot

  • Severity of sour rot was negatively correlated with thickness of berry skin and the time of the beginning of veraison

  • The clusters were more severely infected in the years 2017, 2018, and 2019, which were characterized by abundant rainfall in the August-September period, greater than both the long-term average and rainfall in 2015, 2016 and 2020 in which the sour rot infestation was marginal

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Climate change is widening the grapevine-growing zone in Europe and North America further north, compared to traditional wine-growing regions [1,2].

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