Chpt 1-3 Flashcards
What are the 4 sections of the vine?
Shoots, one-year-old wood, permanent wood, and roots
What makes up the canopy?
Buds, leaves, lateral shoots, tendrils and inflorescences
Shoots on the vine come from buds grown when?
The previous year.
What is an inflorescence?
The cluster of flowers on a stem which becomes a bunch of grapes. 1 to 3 per shoot.
What are solutes?
Substances that dissolve in a liquid to form a solution and in this instance include sugars and minerals.
What is a node?
The little swellings along the shoot where the other structures are attached.
What does the main axis of the shoot do?
Transports water, solutes, and stores carbohydrates.
What is a cane?
When the shoot turns brown and gets woody in the late summer. Shoots lignify.
Define photosynthesis
-the process by which green plants use sunlight to produce sugars from carbon dioxide and water
• the leaves are the main site of photosynthesis in the vine
• the sugars produced in photosynthesis are used for vine growthand metabolism
Describe transpiration
-water vapour diffuses out of the stomata (tiny pores) on the underside of vine leaves
• the loss of water from the cells in the leaf causes water to be pulled upwards from the soil, through the roots and thea bove-ground parts of the vine
What are the requirements of the grape vine?
water, oxygen, heat, co2, sunlight, nutrients
What are the 4 stages of Green Growth in the Vine Cycle?
Dormancy, Budburst, Shoot formation, Flowering and Pollination
What is Coulture?
Failed fruit set for a high portion of flowers. Caused by imbalance in carbohydrate levels. (result of low/poor photosynthesis or vigorous shoot growth) Grenache, Cab Sauv, Merlot and Malbec most susceptible.
What is Millerandge?
High proportion seedless grapes. Ripens normally, but smaller and can be green and unripe. Caused by cold, wet, windy weather at fruit set. Chardonnay and Merlot susceptible.
What are the 7 influences on regional and site climate?
-latitude • altitude • mountains • slopes and aspect • soil • water • air
What are the 5 macro-nutrients the vine requires?
-nitrogen • potassium • phosphorous • calcium • magnesium
List the hazards to the vine.
drought, excess of water, untimely rainfall, freeze, frosts and hail, sunburn, fire and smoke taint
List the 6 Pests in the vineyard.
-phylloxera • nematodes • grape moths • spider mites • birds • mammals
What are the 2 types of buds.
Compound and Prompt
Define a compound bud.
(latent bud) forms in one growing season and breaks open to produce shoots in the next growing season.
Define a prompt bud.
Forms and breaks open to produce lateral shoots in the same growing season.
What is a lateral shoot?
Formed from prompt buds. Smaller and thinner than primary shoots. Main function is allow the plant to carry on growing in case the tip of the primary bud is eaten or damaged.
What is a second crop?
Lateral shoots that produce inflorescenses whose bunches may grow and ripen later. If harvested at the same time as the main bunches, these grapes will have higher acid and unripe flavor/tannin/color.