Analysing the vineyard soil as a natural reservoir for wine yeasts

被引:15
|
作者
Ramirez, Manuel [1 ]
Lopez-Pineiro, Antonio [2 ]
Velazquez, Rocio [1 ]
Munoz, Ana [1 ]
Regodon, Jose A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Extremadura, Fac Ciencias, Dept Ciencias Biomed, Area Microbiol, E-06071 Badajoz, Spain
[2] Univ Extremadura, Fac Ciencias, Dept Biol Vegetal Ecol & Ciencias Tierra, E-06071 Badajoz, Spain
关键词
Vineyard soil; Soil management; Natural reservoir; Wine yeasts; Saccharomyces; Lanchacea; Torulaspora; Spontaneous grape fermentation; RNA GENES DIFFERENTIATION; SACCHAROMYCES-CEREVISIAE; TORULASPORA-DELBRUECKII; MICROBIAL DIVERSITY; BACTERIAL DIVERSITY; FERMENTATION; GRAPE; DYNAMICS; POPULATION; STRAINS;
D O I
10.1016/j.foodres.2019.108845
中图分类号
TS2 [食品工业];
学科分类号
0832 ;
摘要
The cultivable microorganisms isolated from grapes and soils of two contiguous vineyards were analysed. Two types of management system were tested in each vineyard: conventional tillage (CT), and no-tillage with natural green cover vegetation (NV), both under semi-arid rainfed conditions. The main objective was to gather evidence as to whether the yeasts present in ripe grapes before harvest and those found in spontaneous wine fermentations came from the vineyard soil which could then be regarded as a natural reservoir for these yeasts. Bacteria isolated from the grapes all corresponded to three genera (Pseudomonas, Stenotrophomonas, and Bacillus) that were very abundant in soil samples taken just before grape harvest, indicative of probable contamination of the grapes with soil microorganisms. The amounts of fermentative yeasts in vineyard soil increased significantly during the dates close to harvest. Some yeasts were isolated from soils and spontaneous fermentations (Saccharomyces and Lanchacea), while others were only isolated from fermentations (Hanseniaspora, Metschnikowia, and Pichia) or from soils (Torulaspora). Saccharomyces yeasts were isolated from vineyard soil only after grape harvest, to thereafter become undetectable. The analysis of sterile-must fermentations inoculated with soil samples showed that soil was not the origin of the most abundant fermentative yeasts in spontaneous grape fermentations (Saccharomyces and Hanseniaspora), regardless of the soil management system applied. In contrast, other fermentative wine yeasts such as Lanchacea and Torulaspora seemed to be permanently resident in the vineyard soil, especially in the NV vineyard. Hence, contamination of the grapes with vineyard soil may increase yeast biodiversity during spontaneous fermentation, which could affect the wine's organoleptic quality.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] THE COMPARATIVE TOXICITY OF VINEYARD PESTICIDES TO WINE YEASTS
    CONNER, AJ
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ENOLOGY AND VITICULTURE, 1983, 34 (04): : 278 - 279
  • [2] Isolation and molecular identification of wine yeasts from a Brazilian vineyard
    Baffi, Milla Alves
    Bezerra, Carolina dos Santos
    Arevalo-Villena, Maria
    Isabel Briones-Perez, Ana
    Gomes, Eleni
    Da Silva, Roberto
    ANNALS OF MICROBIOLOGY, 2011, 61 (01) : 75 - 78
  • [3] Isolation and molecular identification of wine yeasts from a Brazilian vineyard
    Milla Alves Baffi
    Carolina dos Santos Bezerra
    María Arévalo-Villena
    Ana Isabel Briones-Pérez
    Eleni Gomes
    Roberto Da Silva
    Annals of Microbiology, 2011, 61 : 75 - 78
  • [4] Exploitation of Indigenous Wine Yeasts from Spontaneously Fermenting Grape must and Vineyard Soil in Beijing, China
    Zhang, Qianwen
    Li, Hui
    Sun, Xiangyu
    Huang, Weidong
    Zhan, Jicheng
    EFOOD, 2020, 1 (04) : 316 - 325
  • [6] NATURAL WINE YEASTS AS BIOCONTROL AGENTS
    SUZZI, G
    ROMANO, P
    PONTI, I
    MONTUSCHI, C
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED BACTERIOLOGY, 1995, 78 (03): : 304 - 308
  • [7] Antifungal activity and mechanism of action of carvacrol and thymol against vineyard and wine spoilage yeasts
    Chavan, Pradnya S.
    Tupe, Santosh G.
    FOOD CONTROL, 2014, 46 : 115 - 120
  • [8] Genome instability and population dynamics in natural wine yeasts
    Ramírez, M
    Ambrona, J
    Vinagre, A
    Molina, F
    Rebollo, JE
    YEAST, 2003, 20 : S97 - S97
  • [9] Study on natural yeasts in dry red wine making
    Ni Xueli
    Yang Zhiyu
    Mo Yinbin
    Proceedings of the Fourth International Symposium on Viticulture and Enology, 2005, : 75 - 78
  • [10] Genetic instability of heterozygous, hybrid, natural wine yeasts
    Ramírez, M
    Vinagre, A
    Ambrona, J
    Molina, F
    Maqueda, M
    Robello, JE
    APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2004, 70 (08) : 4686 - 4691