Modeling Fruit Tree Architectural Growth, Source-Sink Interactions, and Physiology with L-PEACH

Modeling source–sink interactions and carbohydrate partitioning in plants requires a detailed model of plant architectural development, in which growth and function of each organ is modeled individually and carbohydrate transport among organs is modeled dynamically. L-PEACH is an L-system-based grap...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inHortScience Vol. 41; no. 4; p. 1010
Main Authors DeJong, Ted M, Favreau, Romeo, Allen, Mitch, Prusinkiewicz, Przemyslaw
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.07.2006
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Summary:Modeling source–sink interactions and carbohydrate partitioning in plants requires a detailed model of plant architectural development, in which growth and function of each organ is modeled individually and carbohydrate transport among organs is modeled dynamically. L-PEACH is an L-system-based graphical simulation model that combines supply/demand concepts of carbon partitioning with an L-system model of tree architecture to create a distributed supply/demand system of carbon allocation within a growing tree. The whole plant is modeled as a branching network of sources and sinks, connected by conductive elements. An analogy to an electric network is used to calculate the flow and partitioning of carbohydrates between the individual components. The model can simulate multiple years of tree growth and be used to demonstrate effects of irrigation, crop load, and pruning on architectural development, tree growth, and carbon partitioning. Qualitative model outputs are viewed graphically as the tree “grows” on the computer screen while quantitative output data can be evaluated individually for each organ or collectively for an organ type using the MatLab software.
ISSN:0018-5345
2327-9834
DOI:10.21273/HORTSCI.41.4.1010D