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ARS Home » Northeast Area » Geneva, New York » Plant Genetic Resources Unit (PGRU) » Research » Research Project #447322

Research Project: Enhancing Resilience of U.S. Pome Fruit Production to Extreme Temperatures in a Changing Climate

Location: Plant Genetic Resources Unit (PGRU)

Project Number: 8060-21000-033-003-R
Project Type: Reimbursable Cooperative Agreement

Start Date: Sep 1, 2024
End Date: Aug 31, 2025

Objective:
1. Improve the tolerance of both scion and rootstock of apple and pear to low temperature stress during acclimation, dormancy and de-acclimation (All Institutions). 2. Reduce the negative impact of high temperature stress during summer/fall on fruit quality in apple and pear (WA, NY, OR). 3. Model the economic impacts and risks of temperature extremes for decision making by commercial apple and pear producers. 4. Initiate rapid and effective extension efforts on temperature-resilient management practices to mitigate the effect of adverse temperatures and climate change on pome fruit production.

Approach:
Phenotyping approaches will be developed using current scion and rootstock cultivars for both apple and pear as well as segregating breeding populations for these traits. Advanced molecular and physiological methods will be used to characterize physiological changes occurring in late fall, winter, and early spring to identify genetic or biological markers associated with those traits. Regional, gridded models will be created to predict the current and future frequency of adverse winter events that can be incorporated into grower decision tools to assess risk of loss and make economical mitigation choices for their production system. ARS will use a combination of controlled physiological experiments on current cultivars and phenotyping studies on breeding populations that segregate for high temperature-related traits. These experiments will better characterize key physiological differences among cultivars with contrasting susceptibility to heat-related stresses and identify genetic markers that will enhance breeding efficiency for heat tolerant cultivars with high fruit quality. Similar to Obj.1, models will be developed to identify economic and geographic risk of adverse summer events that contribute to losses in fruit quality. The economic analysis will evaluate the costs and benefits associated with producing and marketing apples and pears under different climate scenarios. ARS will focus on the impacts to crop yields, crop prices, and inputs across a range of cultivars, rootstocks, management techniques, and geographical areas. We will conduct a backward-looking exercise that will examine the effect of historical climatic events on yields, fruit quality, costs of production, and revenues for specific cultivars across major apple producing regions. Secondly, ARS will conduct a forward-looking examination of apple and pear markets in the United States given a range of potential climate scenarios in the future. Here, we will consider a series of projections about climatic conditions between 2022 and 2052 to simulate yields, prices, operating costs, and revenues for orchard owners for selected cultivars.