Title: Fruit Growth, Development, and Thinning
1Fruit Growth, Development, and Thinning
- Crop Management by Fruit Thinning
2Fruit ThinningSet Required for Commercial Crop
- Large fruited crops
- 2 to 25
- Apple 2-8
- Pear 3-11
- Peach 15-20
- Asian Plum 3-10
- Apricot 20-25
- Small fruited crops
- 40-100
- Almond 20-100
- Blackberry 90-100
- Blueberry 40-95
- Cherry 20-75
- Cranberry 44-77
- Grape 30-70
- Kiwi 95-100
3Fruit ThinningDisadvantage Reduce Fruit Yield
4Fruit ThinningAdvantage Increase Fruit Size
5Fruit Thinning
- Disadvantage
- Reduce fruit yield
- Advantages
- Increase fruit size
- Other Advantages
- Stimulate floral initiation
- Avoid alternate bearing
- Increase leaf to fruit ratio
- Increase fruit color/quality
- Reduce limb breakage
- Improve plant health
6Fruit ThinningIncrease Economic Yield
- Small fruit
- Lower selling price
- Less demand
- More expensive to harvest
- 267 fruit per bushel for 2 fruit
- 132 fruit per bushel for 2.5 fruit
- Large fruit
- Better return with lower harvesting cost
7Thinning RequirementsGeneral
- Small fruited crops are usually not thinned
- The earlier the thinning the greater the effect
8Thinning RequirementsGeneral
- Small fruited crops are usually not thinned
- The earlier the thinning the greater the effect
9Thinning RequirementsStone Fruits
- Peach
- Done up to 6 weeks after bloom
- In Texas, after chance of frost
- Remove gt50 fruit
- Leave 4 to 8 between fruit
- Done by hand
- Chemical thinning?
- Plum
- May alternate bear
- Leave 3 to 4 between fruit
- Done by hand
10Thinning RequirementsPome Fruits
- Apples and Pears
- Yearly to avoid alternate bearing
- Maximum load fruit/spur
- Pears benefit less than apples
- Pears _at_ 60 dab
- Apples _at_ 40 dab
11Thinning Methods
- Hand (clubs, brushes)
- Predetermined spacing
- Remove weak, damaged or small fruit
- Mechanical
- High pressure water at bloom
- Rope curtain
- Tree shaker
- Chemical
12Thinning MethodsChemical
- Advantages
- Cost
- Labor
- Fruit size etc.
- Disadvantages
- Over thinning
- Foliage damage
- Variable results
- Thinning agents
- Caustic compounds
- Synthetic auxins
- Ethylene induction
13Chemical Thinning Agents Caustic compounds
- DNOC (sodium 4,6 dinitro-ortho-cresylate)
- Prevents pollination
- Apply after king bloom has set
- Consistent with heavy setters
- May damage foliage
14Chemical Thinning AgentsSynthetic auxins
- Carbaryl (sevin) (1-naphthyl N-methyl carbamate)
- Toxic to bees
- NAA (naphthalene acetic acid)
- NAD (naphthalene acetamide) - Safer than NAA
- Mode of Action
- Reduce phloem transport
- Upset hormone balance
- Induce ethylene production?
- Post bloom thinners
- Timing less exacting than with DNOC
15Chemical Thinning AgentsEthylene Inducers
- Ethephon
- Not as reliable as others
16Chemical Thinning AgentsReasons for Variable
Results
- Tree genotype
- Weather
- Tree condition
17Reasons for Variable Results Tree Genotype
- Spur types are harder to thin than non spur
- Golden Delicious is harder to thin than Delicious
18Post Bloom Thinning Sprays for Apples in
Washington and (New York)
grams/100 L water
19Reasons for Variable Results Weather
- Increase absorption
- Rain
- High humidity
- Slow drying conditions
- Damage blooms
- Frosty nights
- High maximum temperature
20Reasons for Variable Results Tree condition
- Young vs mature trees
- Very low vs. moderate vigor
- Light vs. heavily pruned
- Close vs. wide spaced trees
- Previous heavy vs. light crop
21Any Questions?