Soil Management Effects on Grapevine Water Uptake Depth in a Mediterranean Vineyard
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Author
Publication date
2026-03-09ISSN
1351-0754
Abstract
In Mediterranean vineyards, soils are often managed with tillage or herbicides to limit weed growth and competition for resources. However, with rising concerns about water scarcity and climate change, cover crops are being reconsidered as sustainable alternatives to conserve soil moisture and support adaptation through better soil structure and biodiversity. Although they are often reported to decrease yields, this is not always the case, and the magnitude and timing of their competition for resources with vines are still not well understood. To address this gap, we examined vine and cover crop water uptake depth during veraison in August in a vineyard from Rioja Alavesa, Spain. We compared tillage (control treatment) with spontaneous cover crop. Using the isotopic composition of plant and soil water (δ18O and δ2H) and Bayesian mixing models, we found that the cover crop relied on water from the upper soil (100% from 0 to 30 cm), while vines under cover crop accessed water from shallow (~48% from 0 to 30 cm) and deeper soil layers (~52% from 30 to 100 cm). Despite cover crops and vines competing for water in the upper soil, the vine's ability to access water from both shallow and deeper soil horizons helped maintain its water status during veraison. Vines under tillage relied predominantly on water in the deeper soil (~73% from 30 to 100 cm). These results indicate that soil management strongly influences vine water uptake patterns. In our vineyard, the spontaneous summer cover crop did not compromise vine water availability during veraison.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
634 - Fruit growing
Pages
12
Publisher
Wiley
Is part of
European Journal of Soil Science
Grant agreement number
EC/INTERREG-SUDOE/SOE3/P4/E0874/EU/Climate and natural risks in the SUDOE mountains/MONTCLIMA
EC/INTERREG-POCTEFA/EFA297/19/EU/New strategies for adapting the vineyards to climate change/VITISAD
EC/INTERREG-POCTEFA/EFA116/01/EU/Adaptation to climate change in vineyards in the POCTEFA area/VITISAD2
EC/HE/101152621/EU/Isotope geochemistry to Water pool conservatIon in viNEyards/IsWINE
Program
Fructicultura
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This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- ARTICLES CIENTÍFICS [3655]
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/


