Nitrogen uptake of 10-year old rainfed
'Cobrançosa' olives in Portugal in an
'on' year [7].
Each year, about 20-30% of the canopy
was pruned. Yield in this study was
about 1 ton/acre, and tree density was
85 trees/acre. Very little N is taken
up during the dormant period for both
'on' and 'off' year trees. The time of
greatest uptake is around March through
May, when fruit set and the spring
flush occur. Uptake starts to slow down
at the pit hardening phase, and is
lower up to the harvest. In "on" years,
more of the spring N uptake is
allocated to the fruit, while in "off"
years, more is allocated to the new
shoots [2].
Nitrogen distribution in high-yielding
irrigated 10-year old 'Barnea' olive
trees in Israel. The values are an
average between 'on' and 'off' years
[2].
Nitrogen removed with harvested olives. Value includes the pulp and pit. The overall average is weighted for the number of observations in each trial. More information can be found here [6].