Influence on wine biogenic amine composition of modifications to soil N availability and grapevine N by cover crops

[Background] Vineyard soil management can modify the nitrogen soil availability and, therefore, grape amino acid content. These compounds are precursors of biogenic amines, which have negative effects on wine quality and human health. The objective was to study whether the effect of conventional tillage and two cover crops (barley and clover) on grapevine nitrogen status could be related to wine biogenic amines. Over 4 years, soil NO3−‐N, nitrogen content in leaf and wine biogenic amine concentration were determined. [Results] Barley reduced soil NO3−‐N availability and clover increased it. In 2011, at bloom, nitrogen content decreased with barley treatment in both blade and petiole. In 2012, nitrogen content in both leaf tissues at bloom was greater with clover than with tillage and barley treatments. Also, total biogenic amines decreased in barley with respect to tillage and clover treatments. There were correlations between some individual and total biogenic amine concentrations with respect to nitrogen content in leaf tissues. [Conclusion] Wine biogenic amine concentration can be affected by the grapevine nitrogen status, provoked by changes in the soil NO3−‐N availability with both cover crop treatments

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pérez-Álvarez, Eva Pilar, Garde-Cerdán, Teresa, Cabrita, M. J., García-Escudero, E., Peregrina Alonso, Fernando
Other Authors: Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Format: artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: John Wiley & Sons 2017-11
Subjects:Soil, Nitrogen, Biogenic amines, Wine, Quality,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/193234
http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100003329
http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100007652
http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000780
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Summary:[Background] Vineyard soil management can modify the nitrogen soil availability and, therefore, grape amino acid content. These compounds are precursors of biogenic amines, which have negative effects on wine quality and human health. The objective was to study whether the effect of conventional tillage and two cover crops (barley and clover) on grapevine nitrogen status could be related to wine biogenic amines. Over 4 years, soil NO3−‐N, nitrogen content in leaf and wine biogenic amine concentration were determined. [Results] Barley reduced soil NO3−‐N availability and clover increased it. In 2011, at bloom, nitrogen content decreased with barley treatment in both blade and petiole. In 2012, nitrogen content in both leaf tissues at bloom was greater with clover than with tillage and barley treatments. Also, total biogenic amines decreased in barley with respect to tillage and clover treatments. There were correlations between some individual and total biogenic amine concentrations with respect to nitrogen content in leaf tissues. [Conclusion] Wine biogenic amine concentration can be affected by the grapevine nitrogen status, provoked by changes in the soil NO3−‐N availability with both cover crop treatments