Introduction to Oenology Flashcards

1
Q

How do you tell the age of a vine?

A

By the thickness of the wood

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2
Q

What are the 2 main roles of the root system?

A
  • Provide a physical anchor to the vine
  • Absorb water and mineral nutrients
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3
Q

How many species of genus vitis are there?

A

79 known species

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4
Q

What is the success rate of pollination for the vine?

A

Roughly 73%

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5
Q

What are the oldest traces of vitis genus? Where, when and what vitis?

A

Traces back to Nice, France in the Paleolithic era, 400,000 years ago. Vitis Sylvestris

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6
Q

What are the oldest traces of vitis vinifera? Where were they found, when, and how do we know?

A

Oldest traces are from a cave in Areni, Armenia. They were traced to storage vessels, drinking cups, skins and seeds. 6000BC

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7
Q

What is a cultivar?

A

Formal word for cepage or variety

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8
Q

What is a clone?

A

Slight genetic modifications that produce grapes to suit varying environments. E.g. soil types, weather, water etc. Or be disease resistant, or produce a higher yield.

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9
Q

What is massal selection?

A

This is where you take a few of the best-performing vines from a vineyard and replicate them in a nursery. This creates variety and quality in a vineyard.

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10
Q

What is Marcottage (layering)?

A

Where vines are woven back into to the ground to create a new root system, effectively cloning the vine, the connecting branch is then cut-off once a root system has been established.

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11
Q

Is Marcottage legal in France? Why/why not?

A

It is illegal due to lobbying from vine nurseries.

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12
Q

What is grafting? Is it mandatory?

A

Grafting is where vinis vinifera is spliced onto phylloxera-resistant rootstock. Generally America rootstock. It’s mandatory worldwide.

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13
Q

When did Phylloxera hit France?

A

1863

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14
Q

What is phylloxera? What are its 2 forms?

A

A parasitic bug, one variety eats the leaves of vitis vinifera, inhibiting its ability to photosynthesise. The other more destructive form eats at the roots system, letting fungi and bacteria destroy the root tissue

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15
Q

Who discovered the solution to Phylloxera?

A

Alexis Millardet

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16
Q

What is the solution to phylloxera?

A

Grafting vitis vinifera onto American rootstock, which is resistant.

17
Q

Where did the phylloxera outbreak start in France?

A

The Rhone Valley

18
Q

In which soil types does phylloxera not spread?

A

Sand and volcanic soil

19
Q

Is it important to stress the vines in their first few years of growth?

A

In order for the vines to not become lazy, it’s important to stress them in the first few years. E.g. close planting, not providing too much water etc.

20
Q

Where are the oldest vines in the world located?

A

Barossa Valley - 163 years old

21
Q

At what temperature do vines enter/leave dormancy?

A

12c

22
Q

What are the advantages of GOBELET pruning?

A

Used in hot and windy regions. Lush canopy prevents berries from sun burn and strong winds

23
Q

What are the three advantages of GUYOT pruning?

A

-Less vulnerable to frost due to airflow
-More sun exposure
-Helps vines to balance on steep slopes

24
Q

What are the two advantages of CORDON pruning?

A

-Easier to prune
-Old vines are able to balance easier

25
Q

What are the two advantages of TRELLIS pruning?

A

-Provides shading for berries
-Manages rain and humidity in regions prone to fungal disease (e.g. Japan)

26
Q

At what temperature can frost hit?

A

At 2c or lower

27
Q

What are the 4 main ways to fight frost?

A
  1. Heaters (pruned wood or candles)
  2. Wind turbines/helicopters
  3. Water sprinklers
  4. Delay pruning
28
Q

What is the main detrimental effect of frost?

A

UV rays are amplified through the frost, burning and freezing the buds

29
Q

How much does a full bunch of grapes weigh?

A

.8 - 1.5kg

30
Q

What are the 4 roles of canopy management?

A
  1. Increasing photosynthesis
  2. Ripening grapes
  3. Improved aeration
  4. Protecting grapes from sunburn
31
Q

What is green harvesting? What is its benefit?

A

Removing extra grapes during fruit set, to improve overall ripeness and quality of grapes that remain

32
Q

What are the 2 advantages of machine harvesting?

A
  1. Generally cheaper in large vineyards
  2. Efficient
33
Q

What are the three advantages of hand harvesting?

A
  1. Can be done everywhere
  2. Can be more selective with quality of bunches
  3. More gentle on the grapes, prevents oxidation
34
Q

What is downey mildew? What does it look like?

A

A disease caused by fungus which appears in humid conditions. It appears as yellow patches on the leaves, inhibiting ability to photosynthesise.

35
Q

What is powdery mildew?

A

A fungal disease that is cause by dust that settles on leaves and spreads its spurs. Deforms and curls leaves, inhibiting photosynthesis.

36
Q

What is grey mold/noble rot/botrytis?

A

A fungus that grows on and through the grape skin. Generally affects tight-bunch grapes in humid areas - e.g semillon - Bordeaux.

37
Q

What is the earliest that French wine producers can make a wine after planting new vines?

A

You can’t harvest before the 3rd spring after planting, other areas are longer e.g. Bandol is 8