Ch 4 - The Vine Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two main species of vine and which is predominantly used to make wine?

A
  1. Vitis Vinifera - main species in Europe and produces nearly all grapes used for wine
  2. American vine - rarely used for wine but used for rootstocks onto which vinifera is grafted because American vine is resistant to Phylloxera
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2
Q

What is cutting? Where is this technique mostly used?

A

A growing technique where a section of an existing vine shoot is planted and grows as a new plant – mostly used in nurseries

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3
Q

What is layering? Where is this technique mostly used?

A

Takes place in vineyards where the cane is bent down and a section buried into the ground. The cane tip points up out of the ground and the buried section takes root. Once established, the cane linking the new growth to the old plant is cut.

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4
Q

Which growing technique is more popular and why? (cutting/layering)

A

Because of phylloxera, most growers use cuttings to avoid layering using infected vines.

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5
Q

Does cutting or layering create a new variety?

A

No - the new plant will be the same variety as the original one

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6
Q

What is clonal selection?

A

Where growers select those clones with good mutations for further propagation by cutting or layering to continue the positive mutations being carried forward into future generations.

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7
Q

What is a clone?

A

Within the same variety it is possible to see variations between plants. These are the result of mutations that may occur while they grow. A Clone is therefore either an individual vine or group of vines with particular set of characteristics distinct from the broader variety.

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8
Q

Does a clone create a new variety?

A

No - although sometimes they can be so distinct they are treated as if they were e.g. Pinot Gris is a clone if Pinot Noir but is generally treated as its own variety.

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9
Q

How can new varieties be created?

A

Can be created in controlled conditions using cross-fertilisation – pollen from male part of flower is transferred to the female part of another vine’s flower which then develops into a grape with seeds. If a seed is planted and grows then this will be a new variety. It has different genetic material from its parents – will be a new variety even if both parents are from same variety.

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10
Q

What are some drawbacks to creating new varieties?

A

It is impossible to know how the new variety will turn out and what characteristics it will have, as they can differ greatly from their parents. It is costly and time consuming because hundreds of seeds are required. Many seedlings fail in the first year and take at least 2 or three before those that manage to survive flower begin to produce grapes. Then it takes time to demonstrate the value of the new variety such that it begins to be picked up by other growers and sold commercially.

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11
Q

What is a crossing? Are they common, give a couple of examples?

A

A crossing is a new variety produced from 2 parents of same species. They are very common, typically every variety used today is a crossing.

e.g. Cab Sav is a cross of Cav Franc and Sav Blanc; Pinotage is Pinot Noir and Cinsault

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12
Q

What is a hybrid? Where would you expect to see a hybrid?

A

Vine whose parents come from 2 different species e.g. have american vine and vinifera. Often used in rootstocks

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13
Q

How does American Vine protect itself against Phylloxera?

A

American vines inhibt the underground louse by clogging its mouth with sap and forming protective layers behind the wound preventing infections.

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14
Q

How does Phylloxera attack vines?

A

At one stage of its life cycle, it lives underground and feeds on roots of the vine – this gives infections through the feeding wounds and over a few years vine is weakend and dies.

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15
Q

What are rootstocks and why are they used?

A

A rootstock is where a grower uses the roots of one variety to form the basis of the vine and grafts another variety onto the roots. They are used to protect against Phylloxera and other pests like nematodes. They can also provide better resistance to drought.

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16
Q

What is the most common rootstock used and why?

A

Most common is to see American Rootstock (or hybrid with it) with V Vinifera grated onto it. This is done to protect against Phylloxera – offers the protection of the American and flavour of the European.

17
Q

What is Bench Grafting and who carries it out?

A

Short sections of cane from both varieties (American and Vinifera for example) are joined together by machine and stored in war environment to encourage them to join, then they can be planted. Bench grafting is carried out by specialist nurseries.

18
Q

What is Head Grafting and why might a grower undertake it? What are its advantages over Bench Grafting?

A

Vine is cut back to trunk and a bud or cutting of new variety is grated to trunk. If successful then the vine will produce the fruit of the new variety at the next vintage rather than the usual 3 years it would take a new vine to mature. Head grafting can be done by a grower if they want to switch to a different variety between seasons. This allows grower to adjust to changes in market demand but is also cheaper than replanting the whole vineyard and gives new variety an established root system.

19
Q

What are the ‘green parts’ of a vine? How frequently do these parts grow?

A

Basically encompasses the shoot including its leaves, buds, tendrils and flowers/berries. Grow new each year.

20
Q

What are the buds?

A

They form in the joint between leaf and shoot, mature inside casing during growing season and at the end of the year they contain all the structures to become shoot, leaves flowers and tendrils the next year

21
Q

What is the primary role of the leaves?

A

They are the plant’s engine and responsible for photosynthesis which allows the vine to use sunlight to convert water and Co2 into glucose and Oxygen. Glucose supports vine growth and gives the ripe berries their sweet taste. In some cases they may also provide shade to the canopy which may be an advantage in particularly hot climates.

22
Q

What is the role of the tendrils?

A

Help the vine support itself by gripping to supporting structures.

23
Q

What role do the flowers/berries play and what do they produce?

A

They are the vines reproductive organs – flowers have both male and female parts grouped in bunches called inflorescences. Each flower, if successfully pollinated, will become a berry and consequently the inflorescence becomes the bunch of grapes.

24
Q

What is “one-year-old-wood”? Why is it significant?

A

The shoots turn woody during the winter following their growing period, the following spring they will be one-year-old-wood. This is significant because the buds that formed burst and grow into shoots and normally vines only produce fruit on the shoots of one-year-old-buds.

Every winter vine is pruned and 1 year old wood will be called a cane or spur depending on the buds left with it. Cane is long – 8-20 buds. Spur is short – 2-3 buds

25
Q

What procedure manages one-year-old-wood? What are the two names given to the wood? Describe each.

A

Every winter the vine is pruned to remove old wood and the remaining one-year-old-wood will be called a cane or spur depending on the buds left with it. Cane is long – 8-20 buds. Spur is short – 2-3 buds.

26
Q

What is the role of the roots?

A

Absorb water and nutrients from soil, anchor vine and store carbs to allow survival in winter.