With very clean fruit a lower pitch rate is ok, but several things have to be considered. Normally the pitch rate is designed to provide a 100 fold size colony of the desired yeast, meaning the cell count of the desired yeast is 100 times any existing yeast population. If your colony is less than this, the desired yeast has a reduced chance of dominating the batch, so the yeast manufacturers always recommend a high pitch rate. Given the number of reproduction cycles required with low pitch rates, nutrients and aeration during the growth phase becomes more important, but I'm certain you'll do fine there. Several studies a few years ago showed that during a cold soak, the ambient yeast start to acclimate in the must, and by the time the normal dose of cultured yeast was added, the cultured yeast cell count was not adequate to dominate the fermentation. The recommendation at the time was to add 1/10 the normal pitch rate at the start of the cold soak to allow acclimatization and provide competition against the ambient yeast, then once temperatures increase, another dose of cultured yeast would be added.
The fact that uninocculated musts with fairly low cell counts will ferment to completion, indicates that any pitch rate will do, you just wont know with a high degree of certainty what yeast dominated the batch. For a number of years I used to ferment 500 lbs of must with a single packet of yeast, but I always made a starter to build up the culture before pitching. That method worked and AF went to completion, but I felt some of the fermentations were stressed near the end, so I switched to using normal recommended pitch rates. For low pitch rates, clean sorted fruit is important to ensure low initial cell counts of undesirable organisms.