1. Plant–atmosphere heat exchange during wind machine operation for frost protection.
- Author
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Boekee, Judith, Dai, Yi, Schilperoort, Bart, van de Wiel, Bas J.H., and ten Veldhuis, Marie-Claire
- Subjects
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WINDING machines , *FROST , *LEAF temperature , *ATMOSPHERIC temperature , *HEAT capacity , *FLOWERING of plants , *EROSION - Abstract
To mitigate spring frost damage, fruit farmers use wind machines to mix warm overlying air down to the vegetation. Up to this point, studies on wind machine efficiency have focused on air temperatures. The temperature of different plant organs during operation remains unknown, while critical for the actual degree of frost damage. With Distributed Temperature Sensing we measured vertical in-canopy air temperature profiles in a pear orchard in the Netherlands and thermistors were installed to determine the plant tissue temperatures. We found that to optimize wind machine operation, it is important to consider two effects of a wind machine: (1) mixing of stratified air above and into the canopy layer and (2) erosion of the leaf boundary layer to facilitate plant–air heat exchange. We show how foliage reduces plume penetration to the ground with distance to the wind machine. Due to this blocking at least 15 rotations (∼ 75 min) are needed for optimal mixing. Leaf temperatures lag behind air temperatures, due to strong radiative cooling. We found that over the rotation cycle of a wind machine the temperature difference between leaf and air is variable as convective warming repeatedly dominates over radiative cooling. This is different for flowers and shoots due to different heat capacities. Thin flower petals store little heat and are almost in direct equilibrium with air temperature changes. Shoots, with their higher heat capacity and lower surface/volume ratio, store more heat during the day that is slowly released at night. This discrepancy between plant and air temperature should be considered for frost damage prediction. [Display omitted] • Fluctuations in air–plant heat exchange are critical for frost damage prediction. • In-canopy warming by wind machines is measured at unprecedented spatial resolution. • Foliage reduces plume penetration to the ground as does distance to the wind machine. • Convective warming of the leaves only exceeds radiative cooling by a few percent. • Warming of plant organs relative to air slows down with increasing heat capacity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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