A Review of Cultural Practices for Botrytis Bunch Rot Management in New Zealand Vineyards

Plants (Basel). 2022 Nov 7;11(21):3004. doi: 10.3390/plants11213004.

Abstract

Botrytis bunch rot of grapes (BBR) causes substantial crop and wine quality issues globally. Past and present foundations for BBR control are based upon synthetic fungicides and varying forms of canopy management. Many authors regard the continued dependence on fungicides as unsustainable and have urged greater deployment of cultural, biological and nutritional strategies. However, in contrast to organic wine production, the uptake of alternative strategies in conventional vineyards has been slow based on cost and perceived reliability issues. This review summarises research from many different wine growing regions in New Zealand with the aim of demonstrating how traditional and newly developed cultural control practices have cost-effectively reduced BBR. In addition to reviewing traditional cultural practices (e.g., leaf removal), mechanical tools are described that remove floral trash and mechanically shake the vines. Multi-omics has improved our knowledge of the underlying changes to grape berries after mechanical shaking. Exogenous applications of calcium may correct calcium deficiencies in the berry skin and reduce BBR but the outcome varies between cultivar and regions. Nitrogen aids in grapevine defence against BBR but remains a complex and difficult nutrient to manage. The sustainable growth of organics and The European Green Deal will stimulate researchers to evaluate new combinations of non-chemical BBR strategies in the next decade.

Keywords: botrytis bunch rot; cultural control; disease; grapes; mechanical thinning; nutrient management.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This research was funded by The New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research Limited and the publication costs were paid for by Nelson Marlborough Institute of Technology. This manuscript provides a summary of New Zealand research that has been funded by a range of agencies including: The New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research Limited, New Zealand Horticultural Advancement Trust, New Zealand Winegrowers Inc., Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (New Zealand Government), Ministry for Primary Industries—Sustainable Farming Fund (New Zealand Government), Marlborough Research Centre Trust, Nelson-Marlborough Institute of Technology and the Our Land and Water National Science Challenge (administered by AgResearch Limited).