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Periods of Shoot Chilling Sensitivity in Soybean Flower Development, and Compensation in Yield after Chilling
Authors:MUSSER  ROBERT L; KRAMER  PAUL J; THOMAS  JUDITH F
Institution:Department of Botany, Duke University Durham, NC 27706, USA
1Department of Botany, NC State University Raleigh, NC 27650, USA
Abstract:Soybeans Glycine max (L.) Merr. cv. Ransom] grown at a constant25 °C were placed in a 12-h inductive photoperiod at twoweeks of age. Subgroups were shoot-chilled for one week at aconstant 10 °C during each of the first four weeks of floralinduction. Controls were photoinduced but not chilled. Chillingduring the first week of photoinduction inhibited productionof floral primordia, but did not increase the abscission rateof flowers and pods. Chilling during the second week did notaffect primordium production or abscission rate, but did causea significant increase in numbers of fused and malformed pods.Chilling during the third week caused loss of 77 per cent ofearly flowers and pods by abscission, while fourth week chillingcaused less severe losses by abscission. Inhibition of vegetativegrowth may have been responsible for primordium loss in first-weekplants, while disturbances in the development of flowers wereresponsible for the losses in the other chilling weeks. Althoughchilling during the first and third photoinduction weeks causeda significant reduction in early pod numbers, plants harvestedat 16 weeks of age showed no significant loss in seed yield.Low abscission rates late in pod filling and increased weightof individual seeds compensated for early losses of pods. Thesecompensatory responses to a chilling-induced loss of pods aresimilar to those reported for mechanically depodded soybeans. Glycine max (L.) Merr., soybean, temperature, chilling, floral initiation, anthesis, abscission, yield, compensation
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