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Impact of elevated temperature and water deficit on the chemical and sensory profiles of Barossa Shiraz grapes and wines

Resumen
Background and Aims: Interactions are the main causes of complexity in field experiments; however, no studies have combined water and temperature regimes in field‐growing vines. Here we assessed grape and wine attributes from a field trial where these factors were directly manipulated. Methods and Results: The experiment consisted of Shiraz vines grown in a 22 factorial experiment with two temperature (control and heated) and two water regimes (deficit [ver mas...]
Background and Aims: Interactions are the main causes of complexity in field experiments; however, no studies have combined water and temperature regimes in field‐growing vines. Here we assessed grape and wine attributes from a field trial where these factors were directly manipulated. Methods and Results: The experiment consisted of Shiraz vines grown in a 22 factorial experiment with two temperature (control and heated) and two water regimes (deficit and irrigated) during two seasons (2010/11 and 2011/12). The sensory and compositional characteristics of grapes and wines were assessed in both seasons, whereas a detailed profile of the phenolic substances was determined by spectrophotometry in 2011/12. We found additive effects (i.e. lack of interaction) between temperature and water for berry mass and components, fruit composition (titratable acidity and pH), grape phenolic substances (12.5% ethanol‐extracted and most of the 70% acetone‐extracted), wine phenolic substances (chemical age 2), and wine sensory traits (floral aromas and berry flavours). Significantly, previously unrecorded interactions between temperature and water were found for grape phenolic substances (70% acetone‐extracted skin and seed tannins and total phenolic substances per berry), wine phenolic substances (colour density, tannins and phenolic substances) and wine sensory traits (floral aromas, cooked fruit flavours and tannin structure). Conclusion: The effect of water deficit leading to colourful and flavoursome wines rich in phenolic substances may not be held under high temperature. [Cerrar]
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Autor
Bonada, Marcos;   Jeffery, David William;   Petrie, Paul R.;   Moran, Martin;   Sadras, Victor Oscar;  
Fuente
Australian Journal of Grape and Wine Research 21 (2) : 240-253 (June 2015)
Fecha
2015-06
Editorial
Wiley
ISSN
1322-7130
1755-0238
URI
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/ajgw.12142
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12123/4683
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/ajgw.12142
Formato
pdf
Tipo de documento
artículo
Palabras Claves
Vid; Grapevines; Variedades; Varieties; Temperatura; Temperature; Calor; Heat; Agua; Water; Antocianinas; Anthocyanins; Variedad Sirah; Déficit Hídrico;
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Excepto donde se diga explicitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)
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