So 71B would be better in high acid fruit musts?
Lowering pH / raising TA is easy -- add acid. For grapes use tartaric, for apples use malic. For other fruits, lookup what the dominant acid is and use that.
To raise pH / lower TA pre-fermentation? That's more problematic. Potassium bicarbonate, potassium carbonate, and calcium carbonate will reduce acid, but have the potential to introduce a metallic taste. I've had bad luck with this approach and hesitate to use it. I'd calculate how much is necessary and add 1/4 that amount, as it's far easier to add more than to take some out. Also note that calcium carbonate can take up to a month to fully work, so it's not a good one for pre-fermentation.
A better choice is to blend with a low acid juice. That will alter flavor, but with a pH of 3.86, you won't need a lot to push the pH into a range the yeast will prefer.
Do this in conjunction with a yeast that eats acid, such as 71B and Renaissance Avante.
Post-fermentation? My preferred approach is cold stabilization, as it has the least negative side effects. This can work for grapes or any fruit with significant amounts of tartaric.
Blending with a lower acid wine is my second choice.
Depending on the wine, backsweetening does not reduce the acid, but it reduces the perception of acid.
x-carbonate is my last choice, for the above stated reasons.