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Pruning Practices and Grapevine Trunk Diseases: A Critical Analysis of Infection Dynamics, Management Strategies and Research Gaps

Submitted:

04 May 2026

Posted:

06 May 2026

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Abstract
Grapevine trunk diseases (GTDs), caused mainly by fungal ascomycetes and some basidiomycetes, threaten vineyard sustainability through yield losses, higher management costs and reduced vineyard lifespan. Because pruning wounds are the main infection courts, pruning decisions strongly shape GTD risk. This review critically analyses advances over the last decade, with a particular focus on studies published since 2018, on how pruning practices influence infection dynamics and management outcomes across GTD complexes. We synthesize evidence on spore dispersal and weather drivers, temporal patterns of wound susceptibility, and the performance of mitigation strategies, including pruning timing (early/late and double pruning), training systems and sap-flow-oriented pruning concepts, optimization of wound number and size, and inoculum reduction through sanitation and remedial surgery. We also review recent field evaluations of pruning-wound protectants under artificial inoculation and natural infection, covering fungicides, biological control agents and physical barriers. Reported outcomes are highly variable among regions, climates and pathogen groups, indicating that universal recommendations are unreliable without local epidemiological context. Priority research gaps include: (i) field validation of traditional pruning concepts (protective wood/desiccation cones and diaphragm preservation) under natural infection; (ii) the epidemiological contribution of growing-season wounds; (iii) mechanistic drivers of the wide range of reported wound-susceptibility duration; (iv) development of cold-tolerant biological control agents effective across pathogen-host combinations; and (v) validation and transferability of spore-dispersal and risk-forecast models across viticultural regions. Overall, GTD management is best approached as a region-adapted, integrated strategy combining pruning decisions, inoculum management and timely wound protection.
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Copyright: This open access article is published under a Creative Commons CC BY 4.0 license, which permit the free download, distribution, and reuse, provided that the author and preprint are cited in any reuse.
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