
Spraying
apple trees with films that contain
microscopic mineral particles may improve
the color of the fruit and increase its
weight. |
Reflective
Particle Films Improve Apple Quality
By
Sharon Durham
September 16, 2008
Spraying apple
trees with films that contain microscopic
mineral particles may improve the color of the
fruit and increase its weight.
That's
according to
Agricultural Research Service (ARS)
research leader
D. Michael Glenn, who is studying these
sprayable films at the ARS
Appalachian Fruit Research Station in Kearneysville, W.Va.
Glenn and
entomologist
Gary Puterka, formerly at Kearneysville
and now at the ARS Wheat, Peanut and Other
Field Station in Stillwater, Okla., conducted
a multi-year study in which sprayable particle
films were installed strategically in an
orchard of Empire apple trees. The particle
film's microscopic layer of mineral particles
allows water and carbon dioxide to pass
through the film.
With some
trees, an aluminized plastic film (ALF) was
applied to the grass strip between the apple
rows. With other trees, a sprayable
particle-based reflective film (PF) was
applied to the trees as well as the grass
between the tree rows. A third group of trees
received no treatment.
The ALF
consistently improved apple color, while the
PF increased red color in apples in two of the
three years of the study. When PF was applied
to the grass between tree rows, the average
fruit weight was increased in all years of the
study, compared to the untreated trees and
those that received the ALF treatment.
The mechanism
responsible for the increased fruit weight
with the PF may be the altered light quality
that is reflected onto the fruit. This
reflected light has enhanced far-red radiation
that may have beneficial effects on both fruit
color and fruit weight. The particle film also
reduced heat and water stress in plants and
improves production efficiency.
Based on these
findings, new management techniques can be
developed that will improve apple quality in a
cost-effective manner.