Keywords

  • apple
  • cherry
  • cropload
  • fertility
  • fertilization
  • fruit tree physiology
  • irrigation
  • mineral nutrition
  • orchard management
  • orchard production system
  • orchard system
  • peach
  • pear
  • pruning
  • rootstock
  • thinning

Robinson, Terence Lee

Professor
I am an applied fruit crop physiologist. My goal is to solve practical fruit production problems that will increase the profitability and strength of the NY fruit industry and fruit growers around the world. My program is largely field oriented and of an applied nature.

research

research and scholarship focus

GOALS: My overall goal is to develop improved orchard production systems including spacing, training system, canopy and crop management strategies, tree forms, planting configurations, rootstocks, irrigation, fertilization and growth regulators that improve yield, fruit quality and profitability of apple, pear, cherry, peach and plum fruits. I have 6 sub-goals under my main goal: • Understand the fundamental principles of orchard system performance by studying the effects of tree form, orchard planting configuration, pruning system and rootstock on light interception and utilization by the canopy and their relation to yield, precocity, fruit quality and pest control. • Determine the profitability of different orchard systems by developing sound data on performance, fruit quality and costs to properly evaluate the economic potential of different orchard systems and management practices to assist growers in making wise investment decisions. • Evaluate new apple rootstocks for adaptability and performance under New York conditions that will improve orchard productivity, survivability and profitability. • Develop improved crop load management strategies that will reduce the risk and improve predictability of producing the most profitable fruit sizes. • Develop improved canopy management practices that will allow trees to be managed at a variety of spacings without excessive vigor, with minimal pruning and with good light distribution . • Develop improved management practices that will maximize new tree growth of newly planted orchards to reduce the turn-around time and investment associated with orchard renewal.

research areas

domestic geographic focus

affiliations

faculty appointment in

member of graduate field

other Cornell affiliations

teaching

teaching focus

I have no formal teaching appointment but I enjoy teaching and look for ways to be involved. I participate in graduate education and I have participated in the development and teaching of the graduate woody plant physiology course Hort 620. Alan Lakso and I team taught 1/3 of the course. I also give guest lectures in the Orchard Management class which is taught by Ian Merwin and Mineral Nutrition of Horticultural Crops which is led by Chris Wein. I appreciate being involved in the teaching program.

service

outreach focus

My extension program is designed to extend knowledge from my research program and from colleagues in Horticulture to the Extension field staff and the tree fruit industry of the world. My key audience is the NY fruit extension field staff and the tree fruit industry of NY state which has a farm gate value of $200 million. I also am involved with the national and international apple industry through scientific and grower meetings around the world. GOALS: 1. Help the NY tree fruit industry modernize to improve their profitability and competitiveness. Within this goal I have three sub-goals: a) increase the rate of orchard renewal and adoption of more efficient and productive high density planting systems through education and demonstration of the management practices, production potential and economics of the best planting systems. b) improve the quality of New York grown apples through education to improve grower management practices, especially pruning and nutrition. c) improve the performance of newly established orchards to reduce replanting costs and turnaround time by education in nursery and orchard management practices to improve early tree growth and yield. 2. Build the expertise, competence and stature of the tree fruit extension field staff. 3. Strengthen the relationship between the fruit industry and Cornell.
Keywords: apple, cherry, cropload, fertility, fertilization, fruit tree physiology, irrigation, mineral nutrition, orchard management, orchard production system, orchard system, peach, pear, pruning, rootstock, thinning