Publication | Closed Access
Response of ‘Comice’ pear trees to a postharvest urea spray
36
Citations
9
References
1990
Year
A single postharvest urea spray at 5 and 10% increased nitrogen (N) content in one year old bark and wood and in the flower buds and blossoms in 1987. In 1988, there was also an increase in N in one year old bark and wood but not in the N content of flower buds and blossoms. Fruit set was not significantly increased in either year. Control trees were much taller in N in 1988 than they were in 1987 since additional soil N was applied. Urea labelled with 15N was applied to branches and individual spurs immediately after harvest. When the l5N-urea was applied to branches, the next season’s flower buds had 12% of their N derived from the fertilizer (NFF), but when urea was applied to individual spurs only 8% NFF was detected. Remobilization of labelled N from treated to adjacent spurs resulted in less NFF than would occur if all spurs on the same branch received labelled N. Flower clusters distal and basal to the spurs treated with labelled l5N showed considerable amounts (>60% of sprayed spur) of N from the labelled spray. However, harvest analysis of adjacent and distant spur leaves and fruits from treated spurs and branches revealed that urea was only locally mobilized in the tree. Nitrogen status can be altered with postharvest urea sprays but the response varies with the N status of the tree. Postharvest soil application of labelled N showed N movement into blossoms but not in the flower buds.
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