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UFOs can improve sweet cherry production

According to the authors of a new study (HortScience, August 2016), high-density tree training systems can help growers make sweet cherry production more efficient and reduce pesticide use. Tiffany Law and Gregory Lang, from the Department of Horticulture at Michigan State University, evaluated the first-year establishment of upright fruiting offshoots (UFO) of sweet cherry trees, and determined effective practices that they say can increase grower's success.

Law and Lang explained that UFO is an innovative and somewhat radical new high-density training system that produces fruit on multiple vertical leaders (offshoots) arising from a cordon-like trunk, ostensibly somewhat like trellised grapes. "This provides a tall, narrow fruiting canopy that is easy to train and prune for renewal of uprights," the authors said. "The goal in establishing a UFO tree structure is to develop well-distributed upright shoots and maximize vertical shoot growth in the trellis plane."

Lang and Law experimented with unbranched single leader nursery trees of 'Rainier' sweet cherry on 'Gisela 3' rootstock, planted at a spacing of ≈1.5 m and divided into 12 treatment combinations. The experiments investigated trunk angle, planting trees at 30°, 45°, or 60° from horizontal. "Imposed on the angle factor was the height at which the trunk was attached horizontally to the first trellis wire (45 or 60 cm), and bent in early summer to form the horizontal cordon," the authors reported.

To determine the influence of bud selection on shoot development, the scientists either left all buds intact or removed most buds except one upward-oriented bud every ≈15 cm.

Planting angle, cordon height, and bud selection all significantly impacted canopy establishment of UFO trees. At planting, trunk angles of 45° or 60° from the horizontal resulted in increased upright shoot growth compared with 30°, and also promoted better shoot distribution on the treatments without bud selection. A cordon height of 45 cm increased total upright shoot length by 20% compared with a 60-cm cordon height.

Bud selection improved canopy development precision by promoting a more balanced distribution of upright shoots across the cordon, reducing the number of shoots in the terminal third of the cordon and increasing shoot numbers in the basal and middle thirds compared with no bud selection. "Bud selection reduced fruiting potential in the 2nd and 3rd years compared with unmanaged treatments, but subsequently surpassed those treatments in projected annual yield in Year 4 and cumulative yield in Year 5," the authors noted. Bud selection increased total and average upright shoot length, and improved distribution during establishment while moderating early crop load potential.

Read more at: phys.org
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