Agronomy (Sep 2019)

An Update on the Impact of Climate Change in Viticulture and Potential Adaptations

  • Cornelis van Leeuwen,
  • Agnès Destrac-Irvine,
  • Matthieu Dubernet,
  • Eric Duchêne,
  • Mark Gowdy,
  • Elisa Marguerit,
  • Philippe Pieri,
  • Amber Parker,
  • Laure de Rességuier,
  • Nathalie Ollat

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy9090514
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 9
p. 514

Abstract

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Climate change will impose increasingly warm and dry conditions on vineyards. Wine quality and yield are strongly influenced by climatic conditions and depend on complex interactions between temperatures, water availability, plant material, and viticultural techniques. In established winegrowing regions, growers have optimized yield and quality by choosing plant material and viticultural techniques according to local climatic conditions, but as the climate changes, these will need to be adjusted. Adaptations to higher temperatures include changing plant material (e.g., rootstocks, cultivars and clones) and modifying viticultural techniques (e.g., changing trunk height, leaf area to fruit weight ratio, timing of pruning) such that harvest dates are maintained in the optimal period at the end of September or early October in the Northern Hemisphere. Vineyards can be made more resilient to drought by planting drought resistant plant material, modifying training systems (e.g., goblet bush vines, or trellised vineyards at wider row spacing), or selecting soils with greater soil water holding capacity. While most vineyards in Europe are currently dry-farmed, irrigation may also be an option to grow sustainable yields under increasingly dry conditions but consideration must be given to associated impacts on water resources and the environment.

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