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Effects of late defoliations on chemical and sensory characteristics of cv. uva longanesi wines

    1. [1] University of Bologna

      University of Bologna

      Bolonia, Italia

    2. [2] State University Paulista Faculty of Agricultural Engineering Department of Phytotecnic, Food Sciences and Socio-Economy
    3. [3] State University of Mid-Western Department of Agronomy
  • Localización: Journal of soil science and plant nutrition, ISSN-e 0718-9516, ISSN 0718-9508, Vol. 14, Nº. 4, 2014, págs. 1021-1038
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Enlaces
  • Resumen
    • In this study we investigated the effects of late leaf removal on the berry and wine composition and on wine sensory characteristics of Uva Longanesi, a late maturing red Italian grape variety, which wines are characterized by high levels of alcohol and excessive astringency, the latter apparently intensified by late defoliation practices. During 2008 season, spur-pruned trained vines were submitted to manual defoliation (4 basal leaves) at the onset (DEF I, 210 DOY) or at the end (DEF II, 231 DOY) of veraison and compared with non-defoliated plants (CON). On every DEF II vine, since defoliation until harvest, a cluster was shaded (DEF II + shading). A decrease of the berry soluble solids and skin anthocyanins was found in DEF I vines. Defoliation modified composition and sensory characteristics of wine with DEF II having higher alcohol strength and astringency compared to DEF I, whereas CON wines displayed intermediate values. The practice and timing of partial late defoliation greatly affected the chemical and sensory attributes of wine.

Los metadatos del artículo han sido obtenidos de SciELO Chile

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