Monday, July 2, 2018

Capfall

The first year that we had flowering in our vineyard, I took many pictures of the process. I was so intrigued! Pictures are one thing but what is actually going on is quite remarkable.1
  • 3 to 4 days before bloom, the petals (calyptra) is easily detached from the flower
  • Petals turn a pale yellow green
  • The disks (discus) begins to swell
  • On the morning of bloom, the rising temperature and the drying air desiccate the upper, less supplied part of the petals sticking together at their tips
  • The tension developed between the outer, dry and inner, turgid cell layers first detaches one of the petals
  • At 20- to 30-second intervals, the next petals separate
  • The abscission (natural detachment portion) is helped by the swollen discs (lower and upper discs or nectaries)
  • The filaments elongate, the petals separate from the base of the flower, to lift upward, thereby releasing the stamens
  • Capfall, or the shedding of the calyptra has been achieved!

Reference:
1. M. Carmo Vasconcelos, Marc Greven, Chris S. Winefield, Mike C.T. Trought, and Victoria Raw1, The Flowering Process of Vitis vinifera: A Review, Am. J. Enol. Vitic. 60:4 (2009).

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