Is dormancy photoperiod, temperature, a simple unchanging hormone cycle related to flowering?
First there are several genera of grapes. Muscadine have different regulatory targets than hybrids from univ of Minnesota. Not all grapes are adapted to the same climate therefore the control paths will be different.
As a midwesterner many crops are photoperiod responsive, they fruit at normal time for the variety but A long warm fall or protected geography will allow longer ripening with higher sugar. We see a temperature effect also. Grapes will “harden off” as they are exposed to lower temperature and winter hardiness (measured by lowest temperature) will increase as they are exposed to cold in December an then January. However if we have a warm spell as in January 2018 our grapes will start to break dormancy (lose absolute winter hardiness) and we suffer bud loss and reduced crop on varieties that should survive a specific temperature.
All in all the system is complicated and folks in the horticulture department are working on the chemical processes so that they can manipulate them. Cornell publishes a lot and reviews current research. U Min seems to publish less but profs are willing to talk about what they have found.
Dormancy existed in the cereal crops. One could plant them but they would not sprout till that effect was over.
For that matter what causes the flowering cycle to start, is that photoperiod or temperature dependant?
Flowering can have a temperature effect which is usually expressed as requiring so many degree days of chill to produce a crop. (Cherries, peaches . . . ) Specific to Midwest grapes, breeders don’t advertise varieties based on this trait. We seem to have photoperiod responsive hybrids. There is what I would call “being adult” buds on second year wood followed by shoots followed by flower clusters followed by flowers opening then fertilization then berry growth. NOTE Midwest grapes produce on second year wood so we are limited to once a season, , ,(however an unknown genera of patio grape claims to fruit all season). Cold will slow the rate of becoming adult (and heat in March will speed the sequential process). Nursery advertising is stated as, new variety X is a week earlier or later relative to old variety.
The system is complicated, , and confusing, , which genera were you asking about ?