Beat the Heat: Protecting Northern Highbush Blueberry from Extreme Heat

A guide to understanding blueberry heat damage, future heat stress risks, and effective strategies to protect flowers and fruit.

Laptop with the Beat the Heat publication pulled up.

Extreme heat is an increasing threat to Washington’s blueberry industry, affecting both yield and fruit quality. This publication explains how high temperatures damage blueberry flowers and fruits by disrupting pollination, impairing photosynthesis, and causing direct injury to plant tissues. It describes temperature thresholds linked to reduced pollen viability, impaired fruit development, and visible damage to leaves and berries. The project analyzes historical heat-stress exposure across blueberry-growing counties and projects future risks through mid-century using climate-model ensembles. Spatial analogs identify regions whose current climates resemble Washington’s future conditions, helping growers anticipate and prepare for changing heat patterns. The publication also reviews mitigation strategies—including evaporative cooling, shade nets, and emerging biostimulants—highlighting their benefits, limitations, economic considerations, and potential impacts on pollination and disease. This information equips Washington growers with science-based guidance to reduce losses and adapt production systems to rising heat stress.

This publication is part of an archive and may not meet current digital accessibility standards. CSANR is working to improve digital accessibility of all materials. If you need this content in an alternative format, please contact csanr@wsu.edu.

Authors

Wasko-DeVetter, L., Savalkar, B., Singh, M., Evalt, P., Rojas-Barros, P., and Bryla, D.

Related Project

Suggested Citation

DeVetter, L.W., S. Savalkar, B. Singh, M. Evalt, P. Rojas-Barros, and D.R. Bryla. 2025. Beat the heat: Protecting northern highbush blueberry from extreme heat. WSU Extension FactSheet FS40E.

Year Published

2025

Areas of Focus

Agricultural Practices and Climate & Environment

Topics

Climate Change, Crops, and Production Systems

Collaborators