Volume 37, Issue 10
Research Article
Full Access

A climatology of Vintage Port quality

António C. Real

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: a.sousa@doc.isvouga.pt

INESC TEC, Department of Industrial Engineering and Management, Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal

Department of Industrial Engineering, Instituto Superior de Entre Douro e Vouga, Santa Maria da Feira, Portugal

Correspondence to: A. C. Real, Department of Industrial Engineering, Instituto Superior de Entre Douro e Vouga, Rua António de Castro Corte Real, 4520–181 Santa Maria da Feira, Portugal. E‐mail: a.sousa@doc.isvouga.ptSearch for more papers by this author
José Borges

INESC TEC, Department of Industrial Engineering and Management, Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal

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José S. Cabral

INESC TEC, Department of Industrial Engineering and Management, Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal

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Gregory V. Jones

Department of Environmental Studies, University of Southern Oregon, Ashland, OR, USA

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First published: 15 December 2016
Citations: 5

ABSTRACT

The Douro Valley of Portugal is a well‐known wine region producing Port wine since the end of the 18th century, with quality table wines becoming increasingly important over the last 20 years. Port wine production is the most important economic sector of the region and Vintage Port is the top quality Port wine type, produced only from the best vintages. The purpose of this research was to examine how the variability of annual weather influences the quality of Vintage Port. A weather and climate data set for the period 1980–2009 and a consensus ranking that combined a collection of vintage chart scores into a ranking were used to characterize both the weather and the vintage quality. In order to more precisely model the weather influences on the quality of the vintages it was necessary to partition the growing season into smaller growth intervals in which several heat and precipitation variables were evaluated. The heat‐related variables were defined according to the phenology of grapevines, using a partition of the growing season based on accumulated temperature, rather than on calendar dates. Precipitation variables were calculated using broad periods corresponding to the dormant, vegetative and maturation stages of the grapevines. A logistic regression model was used as a tool to identify the weather variables that help to explain the relationships between yearly weather characteristics and vintage quality. The results show that several weather characteristics are strongly associated with better quality vintages: growing season mean temperatures above the region's average, warm winters, cool July through véraison and cool temperatures during ripening. In summary, although the weather is not solely responsible for determining a vintage quality, it plays an important role on it; therefore, its understanding can provide invaluable management insights to growers and producers.

Number of times cited according to CrossRef: 5

  • Emerging Trends in Fortified Wines: A Scientific Perspective, Alcoholic Beverages, 10.1016/B978-0-12-815269-0.00013-1, (419-470), (2019).
  • Climate change impact on a wine‐producing region using a dynamical downscaling approach: Climate parameters, bioclimatic indices and extreme indices, International Journal of Climatology, 10.1002/joc.6185, 39, 15, (5741-5760), (2019).
  • Spatial complexity and temporal dynamics in viticulture: A review of climate-driven scales, Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, 10.1016/j.agrformet.2019.107618, 276-277, (107618), (2019).
  • Atmospheric circulation variability and vintage Port wine, Climate Research, 10.3354/cr01513, 75, 2, (117-130), (2018).
  • Estimation of daily mean temperatures: an accurate method for the Douro Valley, Ciência e Técnica Vitivinícola, 10.1051/ctv/20183302167, 33, 2, (167-176), (2018).