Extreme weather events, such as hurricanes, can prove detrimental to flue-cured tobacco yield and quality. Specific to hurricanes, both wind and water are the two primary elements of concern.
Water is a concern due to flooding and/or saturated soil conditions that greatly reduce oxygen in the rooting zone of the plant. The reduction or absence of oxygen produces wilting symptoms in the leaves making them more susceptible to sunscald if temperatures become excessive in the days following a storm. While standing water is of great concern, it is wind that may result in greater damage to plants.
The issue associated with wind is twofold. The primary issue is leaf drop, which causes the physical removal of a leaf or leaves from the stalk. The secondary issue associated with wind is bruising, which results from cell destruction thus causing water and chlorophyll to leak from within the plant cell. This bruising effect will ultimately cause the leaf to turn brown or black in color and typically results in very poor cured leaf quality, even when harvested immediately following severe weather. In addition, bruising is commonly associated with a curing condition referred to as barn rot, which also results in very poor leaf quality, value, and demand. If bruising is not a considerable factor, wind may also increase the rate at which a leaf ripens (or senesces) due to the natural presence of the plant growth regulator known as ethylene. In general, the most pronounced effects of ethylene are the senescence and ripening of leaves and fruit (Taylor et al., 2012).
With the remnants of Hurricane Florence having finally exited North Carolina, tobacco producers must now consider the lasting effects to leaf that presently remains on the stalk and is largely absent of visual injury. As was previously noted, leaf that exhibits immediate bruising, discoloration, or physical damage following a storm event will more than likely result in poor quality once cured. The following applies to commercial producers largely outside of the regions most affected by Hurricane Florence.
While data are not readily available that demonstrate the effects of extreme weather events, we do have information from a holding ability study conducted at the Border Belt Tobacco Research Station (near Whiteville, N.C. in Columbus County) in 2011. This data set may prove useful because plots were exposed to Hurricane Irene for a brief period of time (August 26 and 27, 2011). Below are observations from that specific study. Readers should note that results represent the upper-stalk positions only (leaf and tip) and do not include the lug and cutter groups. In addition, it should be noted that rainfall and wind estimates provided from 2011 are much less than those from 2018.
Cured leaf measurements (yield, quality, price, and value) were greatest when tobacco was harvested two days after Hurricane Irene (Table 1). Wind and rain were not major environmental factors that were generally associated with Irene in the Border Belt region of North Carolina (Table 2); therefore, leaf bruising and standing water were not contributing factors within this harvest interval. Following the first harvest timing, remaining plots were subsequently harvested every 10 days, which is the approximate amount of time required to complete a curing cycle (fill, cure, bring into order, and empty). In the second harvest interval (12 days after Irene), cured leaf yield began to decline though not as rapid as the 22 and 32-day harvest intervals (Table 1). However, cured leaf quality, price, and value were significantly reduced relative to the 2-day harvest timing (Table 1). The reductions in quality and economic measurements are largely due to significant reductions in cured leaf quality that resulted from wind damage, which hastens the natural ripening process, as previously referenced. Cured leaf measurements continued to decline as harvest was delayed by 22 days and were lowest in the 32-day interval (Table 1).
Table 1. Upper-stalk position yield, quality, price, and value as influenced by harvest delay following Hurricane Irene in 2011a,b.