6533b86cfe1ef96bd12c812e
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Planting Systems for Modern Olive Growing: Strengths and Weaknesses
Riccardo Lo BiancoPrimo ProiettiTiziano CarusoLuca Regnisubject
0106 biological sciencessuper-intensive planting systemExploitEmerging technologiesAgriculture (General)pedestrian orchardtraining formEconomic shortagePlant Science01 natural scienceslight interceptionS1-972StraddleCultivarOlea europaeaAgroforestrySowing04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesSettore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale E Coltivazioni ArboreeGeography040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheries<i>Olea europaea</i>Agronomy and Crop SciencePruningStrengths and weaknesses010606 plant biology & botanyFood Sciencedescription
The objective of fully mechanizing olive harvesting has been pursued since the 1970s to cope with labor shortages and increasing production costs. Only in the last twenty years, after adopting super-intensive planting systems and developing appropriate straddle machines, a solution seems to have been found. The spread of super-intensive plantings, however, raises serious environmental and social concerns, mainly because of the small number of cultivars that are currently used (basically 2), compared to over 100 cultivars today cultivated on a large scale across the world. Olive growing, indeed, insists on over 11 million hectares. Despite its being located mostly in the Mediterranean countries, the numerous olive growing districts are characterized by deep differences in climate and soil and in the frequency and nature of environmental stress. To date, the olive has coped with biotic and abiotic stress thanks to the great cultivar diversity. Pending that new technologies supporting plant breeding will provide a wider number of cultivars suitable for super-intensive systems, in the short term, new growing models must be developed. New olive orchards will need to exploit cultivars currently present in various olive-growing areas and favor increasing productions that are environmentally, socially, and economically sustainable. As in fruit growing, we should focus on “pedestrian olive orchards”, based on trees with small canopies and whose top can be easily reached by people from the ground and by machines (from the side of the top) that can carry out, in a targeted way, pesticide treatments, pruning and harvesting.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-01-01 |