Torres Mariela, Pierantozzi Pierluigi, Searles Peter, Rousseaux M Cecilia, García-Inza Georgina, Miserere Andrea, Bodoira Romina, Contreras Cibeles, Maestri Damián
Estación Experimental Agropecuaria San Juan, Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (Inta), CONICET, San Juan, Argentina.
Centro Regional de Investigaciones Científicas y Transferencia Tecnológica de La Rioja (CRILAR, Provincia de La Rioja, UNLaR, SEGEMAR, UNCa, CONICET), La Rioja, Argentina.
Front Plant Sci. 2017 Oct 27;8:1830. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2017.01830. eCollection 2017.
Olive ( L.) is a crop well adapted to the environmental conditions prevailing in the Mediterranean Basin. Nevertheless, the increasing international demand for olive oil and table olives in the last two decades has led to expansion of olive cultivation in some countries of the southern hemisphere, notably in Argentina, Chile, Perú and Australia. While the percentage of world production represented by these countries is still low, many of the new production regions do not have typical Mediterranean climates, and some are located at subtropical latitudes where there is relatively little information about crop function. Thus, the primary objective of this review was to assess recently published scientific literature on olive cultivation in these new crop environments. The review focuses on three main aspects: (a) chilling requirements for flowering, (b) water requirements and irrigation management, and (c) environmental effects on fruit oil concentration and quality. In many arid and semiarid regions of South America, temperatures are high and rainfall is low in the winter and early spring months compared to conditions in much of the Mediterranean Basin. High temperatures have often been found to have detrimental effects on olive flowering in many olive cultivars that have been introduced to South America, and a better understanding of chilling requirements is needed. Lack of rainfall in the winter and spring also has resulted in an urgent need to evaluate water requirements from the flower differentiation period in the winter to early fruit bearing. Additionally, in some olive growing areas of South America and Australia, high early season temperatures affect the timing of phenological events such that the onset of oil synthesis occurs sooner than in the Mediterranean Basin with most oil accumulation taking place in the summer when temperatures are very high. Increasing mean daily temperatures have been demonstrated to decrease fruit oil concentration (%) and negatively affect some aspects of oil quality based on both correlative field studies and manipulative experiments. From a practical standpoint, current findings could be used as approximate tools to determine whether the temperature conditions in a proposed new growing region are appropriate for achieving sustainable oil productivity and quality.
油橄榄(Olea europaea L.)是一种非常适应地中海盆地现有环境条件的作物。然而,在过去二十年中,国际市场对橄榄油和油橄榄果的需求不断增加,导致南半球一些国家扩大了油橄榄种植,特别是在阿根廷、智利、秘鲁和澳大利亚。尽管这些国家的产量在世界总产量中所占比例仍然较低,但许多新的产区并不具备典型的地中海气候,有些位于亚热带地区,关于该作物生长机能的信息相对较少。因此,本综述的主要目的是评估最近发表的关于在这些新种植环境下油橄榄栽培的科学文献。该综述聚焦于三个主要方面:(a)开花所需的低温需求量;(b)水分需求和灌溉管理;(c)环境对果实油浓度和品质的影响。与地中海盆地大部分地区的情况相比,在南美洲的许多干旱和半干旱地区,冬季和早春月份气温较高,降雨量较低。人们经常发现,高温对许多引入南美洲的油橄榄品种的开花有不利影响,因此需要更好地了解低温需求量。冬春季节降雨不足也导致迫切需要评估从冬季花芽分化期到幼果期的需水量。此外,在南美洲和澳大利亚的一些油橄榄种植区,生长季初期的高温会影响物候事件的时间,使得油合成开始的时间比地中海盆地更早,且大部分油脂积累发生在夏季气温非常高的时候。基于相关的田间研究和控制实验表明,日平均气温升高会降低果实油浓度(%),并对油脂品质的某些方面产生负面影响。从实际角度来看,目前的研究结果可作为大致的参考工具,以确定拟议的新种植区的温度条件是否适合实现可持续的油脂产量和品质。