Content area
This paper presents some features of apple production in Norway, the northernmost apple-growing country in the world. Acceptable growing conditions prevail along the fjords in western Norway and around the lakes in eastern Norway at 60° north. These specific mesic climate conditions are associated with very long summer days (18 h daylight mid-summer) and short winter days (6 h daylight), with frost rarely occurring in the spring along the fjord areas. The present apple-growing technique in Norway is similar to that of other developed apple-growing countries, taking into account that all local growing phases involve a considerable delay in progress (1.5–2 months). Therefore, high-density planting systems based on the use of dwarf rootstocks (mainly M.9) with imported early maturing international apple cultivars are used in most orchards. The most common soil type has high organic matter content (2–18%), which persists due to the cool climate and low mineralization, and a clay content of <15%, which results from the formation of the soil from bedrock. The increase in average temperatures caused by current climatic changes leads to a complex combination of different physiological effects on apples, which can have positive or negative effects on the phenology of the trees. The main advantage of Norwegian apple production is that the quality and aroma of the fruit meet the current demands of the local market.
Details
Agricultural production;
Summer;
Seasons;
Weather;
Fjords;
Soil types;
Organic matter;
Climate change;
Fertilization;
Winter;
Physiological effects;
Cultivars;
Aroma;
Fruits;
Planting density;
Food quality;
Nitrogen;
Agriculture;
Soils;
Precipitation;
Climate;
Apples;
Clay minerals;
Temperature;
Soil formation;
Mineralization;
Climatic conditions;
Plant growth;
Natural & organic foods;
Daylight
; Meland, Mekjell 3
1 Faculty of Agriculture, University of Belgrade, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia;
2 Faculty of Environmental Sciences and Natural Resource Management, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, N-1432 Aas, Norway;
3 NIBIO Ullensvang, Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research, Ullensvangvegen 1005, N-5781 Lofthus, Norway