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-556 possessed high fruit firmness, but low incidence of fruit bruising. Some have high firmness at harvest (e.g., ‘Sweetcrisp’ and ‘Meadowlark’), but bruising develops as a result of impact damage. In others (e.g., FL 05-528 and FL 06-556), fruit quality and
There is increased interest in growing blackberries in the United States for the fresh fruit market. For fresh market blackberry production, >350 h/acre (900 h·ha-1) of work is required to hand pick blackberries over a season that lasts 5 weeks with harvest every 2 days. Existing bramble mechanical harvesters can detach fruit from plants trained on a vertically oriented I trellis and harvest more cheaply than when harvested by hand, but the harvested fruit does not have fresh-market quality. We developed a cane training and trellis system for semierect blackberries to orient canes horizontally with the fruit positioned below the canes. Also, we developed an over-the-row mechanical harvester that uses vibrating nylon rods on a drum to shake fruit from horizontally trained canes onto a moving fruit-catching surface directly under the canopy to minimize impact damage to fruit. A new trellis design, new cane training practices, and new harvesting technologies have allowed fruit to be removed efficiently and be acceptable for fresh-market sales. This production system has been evaluated economically and appears to be profitable. It could overcome the high cost of handpicking, which has limited the expansion of fresh-market blackberries.
avoid damaging the trees and the instruments. These edge sections are also padded with a rubber bumper to minimize impact damage to the sensor system. The system outputs a total of 18 PAR values across the row width. The effective coverage of each of
firmness and percent bruising after hand harvest for several SHB cultivars and selections. Some cultivars had high firmness at harvest, but bruising developed as a result of impact damage after storage, while others had high firmness at harvest and low
storm damage; 3) air pollution removal (an external value from health impacts), damage to landscape and ecosystems, and reduced visibility; and 4) energy usage savings for adjacent buildings through shading, evaporative cooling, and blocking of wind