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Effect of low temperature on dormancy breaking and growth after planting in lily bulblets regenerated in vitro
Authors:Merel M Langens-Gerrits  William BM Miller  Anton F Croes  Geert-Jan de Klerk
Institution:(1) Applied Plant Research (PPO), Lisse, 2160 AB, The Netherlands;(2) Present address: ENZA Zaden, Enkhuizen, 1600 AA, The Netherlands;(3) Department of Floriculture and Ornamental Horticulture, Cornell University, Ithaca, USA;(4) Department of Experimental Botany, University of Nijmegen, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Abstract:Lilies regenerating on scale segments may develop dormancy in vitro depending on the culture conditions. The dormancy is broken by storage for several weeks at a low temperature (5 °C). The effect of the low temperature on sprouting, time of leaf emergence and further bulb growth was studied. Dormant and non-dormant bulblets were regenerated in vitro on bulb scale segments cultured at 20 °C or 15 °C, respectively. The low temperature not only affected the number of sprouted bulblets but also the time of emergence. The longer the cold storage, the faster and more uniform leaf emergence occurred. Both dormant and non-dormant bulblets grew faster after a low temperature treatment of six weeks. Thus, during dormancy breaking the tissue is prepared not only for sprouting but also for subsequent bulb growth. These processes are rather independent as low temperature stimulates growth in non-dormant bulblets whereas these bulblets sprout also without treatment at low temperature. Moreover, the hormone gibberellin induces rapid sprouting but has no influence on further bulb growth. Good growth in bulblets exposed to the low temperature coincided with production of an increased leaf weight. However, the relationship is not absolute as bulblets that were cold-treated for six weeks grew larger than bulblets cold-treated for four weeks but the formation of leaf biomass was similar. During storage at low temperature starch was hydrolyzed in the bulb scales and sugars accumulated. This indicates that during this period, preparation for later bulb growth involves mobilization of carbohydrate reserves which play a role in leaf growth and development of the photosynthetic apparatus. Starch hydrolysis proceeded in the outer scales after planting. Approximately six weeks later, the switch from source to sink took place in the bulblet, which became visible as a deposition of starch in the middle scales.
Keywords:Bulb growth  Carbohydrates  Cold  Dormancy breaking  Gibberellin  Lilium
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