Search results for "orchard"

showing 10 items of 104 documents

Discriminating irrigated and rainfed olive orchards with thermal ASTER imagery and DART 3D simulation

2009

Article in Press

Atmospheric Science010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences0211 other engineering and technologiesBiometeorology02 engineering and technologyCanopy temperature01 natural sciencesNormalized Difference Vegetation IndexASTERAdvanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection RadiometerVegetation indexEvapotranspirationRadiative transferIrrigatedSatellite imageryRainfed agricultureLeaf area index021101 geological & geomatics engineering0105 earth and related environmental sciencesRemote sensing2. Zero hungerGlobal and Planetary ChangeForestry15. Life on landEnvironmental scienceDARTRainfedOrchardAgronomy and Crop ScienceAgricultural and Forest Meteorology
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Obtaining the three-dimensional structure of tree orchards from remote 2D terrestrial LIDAR scanning

2009

In recent years, LIDAR (light detection and ranging) sensors have been widely used to measure environmental parameters such as the structural characteristics of trees, crops and forests. Knowledge of the structural characteristics of plants has a high scientific value due to their influence in many biophysical processes including, photosynthesis, growth, CO2-sequestration and evapotranspiration, playing a key role in the exchange of matter and energy between plants and the atmosphere, and affecting terrestrial, above-ground, carbon storage. In this work, we report the use of a 2D LIDAR scanner in agriculture to obtain three-dimensional (3D) structural characteristics of plants. LIDAR allows…

Atmospheric ScienceGlobal and Planetary ChangeCorrelation coefficientForestryVegetationOptical radarRadar òpticTree volumeFotogrametria aèriaArbresTerrestrial LIDARTree (data structure)Lidar:Enginyeria agroalimentària::Ciències forestals [Àrees temàtiques de la UPC]Evapotranspiration3D Plant structureEnvironmental scienceOrchardLeaf area indexAgronomy and Crop ScienceLaser measurementsRemote sensingWoody plant
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Detection of Water Stress in an Olive Orchard with Thermal Remote Sensing Imagery

2006

An investigation of the detection of water stress in non-homogeneous crop canopies such as orchards using high-spatial resolution remote sensing thermal imagery is presented. An airborne campaign was conducted with the Airborne Hyperspectral Scanner (AHS) acquiring imagery in 38 spectral bands in the 0.43–12.5 mm spectral range at 2.5 m spatial resolution. The AHS sensor was flown at 7:30, 9:30 and 12:30 GMT in 25 July 2004 over an olive orchard with three different water-deficit irrigation treatments to study the spatial and diurnal variability of temperature as a function of water stress. A total of 10 AHS bands located within the thermal-infrared region were assessed for the retrieval of…

Atmospheric ScienceGlobal and Planetary ChangeGround truthCrown temperatureWater stressDeficit irrigationAtmospheric correctionHyperspectral imagingForestrySpectral bandsEmissivityEnvironmental scienceOrchardDeficit irrigationAgronomy and Crop ScienceImage resolutionThermal remote sensingRemote sensingSplit-window
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Effects of temperature and pollination site on pollen performance in Betula pendula Roth – evidence for genotype-environment interactions

2000

We studied whether the differences between genetically different pollen donors (Betula pendula Roth clones) with respect to pollen-tube growth rate were consistent under different thermal conditions during pollen germination in vivo and in vitro. We conducted a single-donor hand-pollination experiment with same pollen donors and recipients in a plastic house seed orchard and at an outdoor clone collection. The prevailing daily mean temperature during pollen germination was 13°C higher in the plastic house than outdoors. The pollen-tube growth rate of each pollen donor was additionally determined in vitro on agar medium at five temperatures (10°, 15°, 22°, 30° and 35°C). A significant intera…

BetulaceaePollinationfungifood and beveragesGeneral MedicineBiologymedicine.disease_causebiology.organism_classificationBetula pendulaGerminationPollenBotanyotorhinolaryngologic diseasesGeneticsmedicinePollen tubeGene–environment interactionSeed orchardAgronomy and Crop ScienceBiotechnologyTheoretical and Applied Genetics
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Do pollen donors with fastest-growing pollen tubes sire the best offspring in an anemophilous tree,Betula pendula(Betulaceae)?

2001

The relationship between pollen and progeny performance has been a subject of many studies but the evidence for pollen-tube growth rate as an indicator of progeny fitness is equivocal. We used an anemophilous tree, Betula pendula, to examine the relationship between pollen-tube growth rate and seed and seedling performance. We crossed nine maternal plants with pollen from six pollen donors in a clonal B. pendula seed orchard, measured the pollen-tube growth rates for every cross, and analyzed the performance of the resulting seeds and seedlings. The only significant positive correlation was found between pollen-tube growth rate and seed mass when we controlled for seed number per infloresce…

BetulaceaebiologyMaternal effectfood and beveragesPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease_causeHorticultureInflorescenceSeedlingBetula pendulaPollenBotanyotorhinolaryngologic diseasesGeneticsmedicinePollen tubeSeed orchardEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAmerican Journal of Botany
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Pollen‐tube growth rate and seed‐siring success among Betula pendula clones

1999

The aim of this study was to investigate whether genetically different pollen donors (Betula pendula clones) differed in pollen-tube growth rate across 11 maternal plants and in vitro, and whether the differences between the donors were consistent across the recipients. To compare the seed-siring success of competing pollen donors, a two-donor hand-pollination experiment with six donors and six recipients was conducted. The experiments were performed at a plastic-house seed orchard. The donors showed significant variation in pollen-tube growth rate on all the 11 recipients. The rankings of the pollen donors were statistically consistent across different maternal plants. A significant positi…

Betulaceaeeducation.field_of_studybiologyPhysiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationfood and beveragesPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease_causeCompetition (biology)HorticultureBetula pendulaPollenBotanyotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicinePollen tubeeducationSeed orchardFertilisationmedia_commonNew Phytologist
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Evaluation of Small Vase and Y-trellis Orchard Systems for Peach and Nectarine Production in Mediterranean Regions

2015

Two peach planting systems, Small Vase (SV) and Y-trellis (Y), were evaluated and compared in the Mediterranean settings of Southern Italy. The two orchards were located next to each other on relatively uniform soil and terrain, and the observations included two peach (‘Rich May’ and ‘Summer Rich’) and two nectarine (‘Big Bang’ and ‘Nectaross’) cultivars. In the SV system, trees were spaced at 4.5 A— 2.5 m (888 trees/ha), whereas in the Y system, trees were spaced at 5.5 A— 2 m (909 trees/ha) and no canopy gap was left between rows. Yield per tree; fruit size grade; unit price of sold peaches for each size grade; materials, labor and associated costs for cultural management;…

CanopyCrop yieldfixed costs fruit size management labor profit Prunus persica training system yieldYield gapSowingTrellis (architecture)HorticultureSettore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale E Coltivazioni ArboreeHorticultureYield (wine)CultivarOrchardMathematics
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Vegetative and productive responses of ‘Conference’ and ‘Williams’ pear trees planted at different in-row spacings

2006

Abstract The effect of in-row spacing on the vegetative and productive performance of 4-year-old ‘Conference’ (CON) and ‘Williams’ (WIL) pear trees was studied. Analysis of digital images was used to estimate canopy growth and conformation. Fruit quality was determined by measuring fruit weight, flesh firmness, peel color, soluble solid content, and titratable acidity. WIL produced more and more efficiently than CON, especially at closer spacings. WIL canopies were generally bigger than CON canopies, and reduced spacing penalized stem growth and influenced canopy conformation. Root growth and conformation was similar for both cultivars, whereas decreasing in-row spacing reduced root dry wei…

CanopyHorticulturePEARbiologyDry weightVegetative reproductioncanopy growth carbon partitioning fruit weight peel color soluble solidsRoot systemHorticultureOrchardbiology.organism_classificationFruit treePyrus communisScientia Horticulturae
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Micrometeorological and sap flow measurement of water vapour exchanges in olive: Scaling up from canopy to orchard

2009

A comparison of water consumption evaluated at tree and orchard level was carried out in a commercial olive orchard located in Sicily using up-scaled sap-flow evapotranspiration estimations and eddy covariance measurements. Sap flow probes were installed on olive trees placed in one of the four plots characterizing a heterogeneous orchard. Trees were chosen, from a preliminary footprint analysis, in correspondence to the peak of the “relative normalized contribution” to flux for the prevailing wind conditions measured by an eddy covariance station localized in the central part of the orchard. Tree-age and planting density as well as main tree and orchard characteristics (Leaf Area per tree,…

CanopyHydrologyHorticultureCovarianceFlow measurementSettore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale E Coltivazioni ArboreeAgronomyEvapotranspirationEnvironmental scienceolive sap flow eddy covariance tree transpiration soil evaporationOrchardScalingWater useWater vapor
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Monitoring Yield and Fruit quality parameters in Open-Canopy Tree crops under Water Stress. Implications for ASTER

2007

Work on water stress detection at tree and orchard levels using a high-spatial airborne thermal sensor is presented, showing its connection with yield and some fruit quality indicators in olive and peach commercial orchards under different irrigation regimes. Two airborne campaigns were conducted with the Airborne Hyperspectral Scanner (AHS) over olive and peach orchards located in Córdoba, southern Spain. The AHS sensor was flown at three different times on 25 July 2004 and 16 July 2005, collecting 2 m spatial resolution imagery in 80 spectral bands in the 0.43– 12.5 μm spectral range. Thermal bands were assessed for the retrieval of land surface temperature using the split-window algorith…

CanopyHydrologyIrrigationFruit qualitybiologyWater stressAHSSoil ScienceGeologyRemote sensingbiology.organism_classificationOlive treesASTERHorticultureThermalAirborneEnvironmental scienceComputers in Earth SciencesOrchardIrrigation managementAster (genus)Water contentTESFruit treeRemote sensing
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