Elevated carbon dioxide and temperature effects on rooting behaviour of grape cuttings

Authors

  • SHRUTHI REDDY L Centre of Excellence, Jeedimetla, India
  • GOPALA KRISHNA REDDY A ICAR-CRIDA, Hyderabad, India
  • VANAJA. M ICAR-CRIDA, Hyderabad, India
  • MARUTHI. V. ICAR-CRIDA, Hyderabad, India
  • VANAJA LATHA. K. SKL Telangana State Horticultural University, Hyderabad, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54386/jam.v23i3.24

Keywords:

eCO2, root growth, stem cuttings, WinRHIZO, varieties

Abstract

An experiment was laid out to study the impact of eCO2 (550ppm), eT (+3ºC) and their interaction (eCO2+eT) on rooting behaviour of cuttings of three grape varieties- Thompson Seedless, Bangalore Blue, and Dogridge in FATE and OTC facilities. Observations were recorded at 50 and 80 days after planting (DAP) and root growth data was recorded and analysed using WinRHIZO root scanner and its software. Analysis revealed that, among the selected grape varieties, Thompson Seedless cuttings has shown highest number of roots, root volume and dry biomass under eCO2 and eCO2+ eT conditions, while total root length and root length density were highest with Bangalore Blue. Under eT condition, Bangalore Blue showed highest number of roots, total root length and root length density, while root volume and dry biomass was highest with Thompson Seedless. The per se values of root parameters under all conditions and their response to eCO2 was lowest with Dogridge. Though eT condition reduced all the root parameters, their performance improved under eCO2+ eT indicating the presence of higher concentration of CO2 reduced the ill effects of high temperature. Overall, eCO2 and eCO2+eT conditions improved root parameters of grape varieties, while eT reduced them as compared to their performance under ambient condition and varietal variation is significant.

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Published

01-09-2021

How to Cite

SHRUTHI REDDY L, GOPALA KRISHNA REDDY A, VANAJA. M, MARUTHI. V., & VANAJA LATHA. K. (2021). Elevated carbon dioxide and temperature effects on rooting behaviour of grape cuttings. Journal of Agrometeorology, 23(3), 257–264. https://doi.org/10.54386/jam.v23i3.24

Issue

Section

Research Paper