Abstrakt: |
Uniform nursery stock of five almond cultivars [Prunus dulcis(Mill) D.A. Webb syn. P. amygdalusBatsch, ev. Butte, Carmel, Mission, Nonpareil, and Sonora] propagated on peach (P. domesticaL. Batsch.) rootstock were exposed to three different atmospheric ozone (O3) partial pressures. The trees were planted in open‐top fumigation chambers on 19 Apr. 1989 at the University of California Kearny Agricultural Center located in the San Joaquin Valley of California. Exposures of the trees to three atmospheric O3partial pressures (charcoal filtered air, ambient air, or ambient air + O3) lasted from 1 June to 2 Nov. 1989. The mean 12‐h [0800–2000 h Pacific Daylight Time (PDT)] O3partial pressures measured in the open‐top chambers during the experimental period were 0.038, 0.060, and 0.112 µPa Pa−1O3in the charcoal filtered, ambient, and ambient + O3treatments, respectively. Leaf net CO2assimilation, trunk cross‐sectional area growth, and root, trunk, foliage, and total dry weight of Nonpareil were reduced by increased atmospheric O3partial pressures. Mission was unaffected by O3and Butte, Carmel, and Sonora were intermediate in their responses. Foliage of Nonpareil also abscised prematurely in the ambient and ambient + O3treatments. The results indicate that there are almond cultivars that are sensitive to O3exposure. |