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Fruit trees are grown in a variety of shapes, sometimes for aesthetic appeal but mainly to encourage fruit production. The form or shape of fruit trees can be manipulated by pruning and training. Shaping and promoting a particular tree form is undertaken to establish the plant in a particular situation under certain environmental conditions, to increase fruit yield, and to enhance fruit quality. For example, pruning a tree to a pyramid shape enables trees to be planted closer together.[citation needed] An open bowl or cup form helps sunlight penetrate the canopy, thus encouraging a high fruit yield whilst keeping the tree short and accessible for harvesting.[citation needed] Other shapes such as cordons, espaliers and fans provide opportunities for growing trees two dimensionally against walls or fences, or they can be trained to function as barriers.
Forms
editSome of the following fruit tree forms require training by tying the branches to the required form. Most also require pruning to retain the desired structure. However, not all types of fruit tree are suitable for all forms; apples and pears do well as cordons and espaliers, for example, whereas cherries are better suited to the fan form.
Bush
editAn open-centred crown on a short trunk of less than 1 metre (3 ft 3 in). This is a traditional and popular form for apple trees. Bush trees are easy to maintain and bear fruit at a young age. Final height is between 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) and 5.5 metres (18 ft), depending on which rootstock is used.[1]
Standard
editLarger than the bush form, with trunks of 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) or more. Standard trees can reach a total height of 8 metres (26 ft). They eventually produce high yields but, being large trees, are not easy to maintain.[1]
Pyramid
editSimilar to the bush form, although the main leader shoot is allowed to maintain its dominance, resulting in a pyramidal shape.
Spindlebush
editA variant of the pyramid form in which the lateral branches are tied down to a horizontal position. Designed for dense orchards by Otto Schmitz-Hübsch and Heinrichs in Germany in 1936, this is currently the most popular training system for dwarf apple and pear trees.[2]
Cordon
editSingle-stemmed trees planted at an angle (usually 45°), with fruiting spurs encouraged to form along the stem. Any side branches are removed by pruning. Cordons take less space and crop earlier than most other forms, so more varieties can be grown in a given space, but yields are smaller per tree.[3] A special cordon set-up is the Bouché-Thomas system.
Espalier
editA central vertical trunk with three or four horizontal branches on each side. A special espalier in this group is the LePage-system.
Fan
editA short central trunk with several radiating branches growing from the crown.
Step-over espalier
editEspaliers with just one tier of horizontal branches 30 cm (12 in) above the ground. These make a novel and productive border for a vegetable plot.
A study on orchard mango trees in Nelspruit, South Africa, compared the open vase, closed vase, central leader, palmette and standard pruning systems and recommended a modified pyramid, somewhere between a central leader and a closed vase system, for high-density mango orchards. The study also evaluated both post-fruit-set and post-harvest pruning, indicating that late mango cultivars benefit from pruning while bearing fruit in late fall, while early cultivars may be best pruned immediately after harvest.[4]
Yield and spacing
editApples and pears | Yield | Spacing | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Apples | Pears | In rows | Rows apart | |
Bush | 25–50 kg | 20–45 kg | 4–5 m | 4–5 m |
Dwarf bush | 15–25 kg | 10–20 kg | 2.5–5 m | 2.5–5 m |
Dwarf pyramid | 5–7 kg | 3–5 kg | 1.5–2 m | 2 m |
Espalier (two tier) | 10–12 kg | 7–10 kg | 3–6 m | 2 m |
Fan | 5–15 kg | 5–15 kg | 4–5 m | - |
Single cordon | 2–4 kg | 2–3 kg | 0.5–1 m | 2 m |
Standard | 50–200 kg | 40–100 kg | 6–10 m | 6–10 m |
Other tree fruits | Yield | Spacing | |
---|---|---|---|
In rows | Rows apart | ||
Bush (sour cherry) | 15–20 kg | 4–5 m | 4–5 m |
Bush (plum and peach) | 15–30 kg | 4–5 m | 4–5 m |
Bush, standard (sweet cherry) | 15–50 kg | 5–12 m | 5–12 m |
Fan (all stone fruits) | 7–15 kg | 4–5 m | - |
Fan (sweet cherry) | 6–15 kg | 5–7.5 m | - |
Pyramid (plum) | 15–25 kg | 3–4 m | 3–4 m |
Standard (plum, peach and apricot) | 15–50 kg | 5–7.5 m | 5–7.5 m |
Images
edit-
A community apple orchard originally planted for productive use
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Description of the Bouché-Thomas fruit tree form
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Photo of the LePage fruit tree form
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Description of LePage fruit tree form
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Description of the single row fruit tree form setup
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Description of the spindlebush fruit tree form
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Photo of the spindlebush fruit tree form
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Description of the "Jeukse Haag" fruit tree form
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Photo of the standard fruit tree form
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Description of the double row fruit tree form setup
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Description of the triple row fruit tree form setup
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b Hessayon, Dr D. G., The Fruit Expert, Transworld Publishers Ltd, 1997, p10
- ^ "TRENDS IN FRUIT TREE TRAINING AND PRUNING SYSTEMS IN EUROPE". www.actahort.org.
- ^ "Main fruit tree forms". Archived from the original on 2008-08-08. Retrieved 2008-07-13.
- ^ Stassen, P. J. C.; Grovè, H. G.; Davie, S. J. (2001) [1999], "Tree shaping strategies for higher density mango orchards" (PDF), Journal of Applied Horticulture, 1 (1), Society for Advancement of Horticulture: 1–4
Books and publications
edit- Burvenich, Frederik (1879). Snoei der Fruitbomen.