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2.
The Growth and Development of Maize (Zea mays L.) at Five Temperatures   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The objectives of this work were to measure growth and developmentrates over a range of temperatures and to identify processeswhich may limit vegetative yield of maize (Zea mays L.). Twosingle cross Corn Belt Dent maize hybrids were grown from sowingin a diurnal temperature regime of 16/6 °C day/night andin constant temperature environments of 16, 20, 24 and 28 °C.The 16/6 °C environment was close to the minimum for sustainedgrowth and 28 °C was near the optimum. Entire plants wereharvested at stages with 4, 6, 7 and 8 mature leaves in alltemperature treatments except 20 °C in which the final twoharvests were carried out at 9 and 10 mature leaves. Mean totalleaf number varied between 19.5 and 16.0 with the maximum occurringat 16/6 °C. Although harvests were carried out at comparableleaf numbers, and hence at similar developmental stages, thetime interval between sowing and harvest decreased considerablyas temperatures increased. The relative rates of dry weight and leaf area accumulationwith time increased with a Q10 of 2.4 between 16 and 28 °C,while leaf appearance rate increased with a Q10 of 2.9 overthe same range; both rates were highest at 28 °C. Althoughdry matter partitioning to the shoots increased with temperature,the area of individual leaves varied in a systematic patternwhich resulted in maximum leaf area, leaf area duration andconsequently dry weight being realized at 20 °C for anygiven stage of development. Zea mays, corn, low temperature stress, temperature response, growth, development  相似文献   

3.
NILWIK  H. J. M. 《Annals of botany》1981,48(2):137-146
A growth analysis was carried out with sweet pepper plants grownin a phytotron. Irradiance conditions were: 0.84 or 3.25 MJm–2 in 8 h, 1.67 MJ m–2 in 16 h and 2.51 MJ m–2in 24 h. Temperatures applied were 25 or 21 °C during thephotoperiod in combination with 25, 21 and 17 or 21, 17 and13 °C respectively during the nyctoperiod. Highest values for leaf area and total dry weight were foundwhen applying 1.67 MJ m–2 in 16 h, followed by 3.25 MJm–2 in 8 h, irrespective of the temperature regime. Continuousirradiance ultimately resulted in leaf drop. A reduction inthe day temperature decreased leaf area and total dry weight.At a day temperature of 25 °C the dry weight increased withdecreasing night temperature when applying 3.25 MJ m–2in 8 h. At a day temperature of 21 °C leaf area and dryweight were reduced when 17 or 13 °C were applied duringa 16 h nyctoperiod. Values for relative growth rate, net assimilation rate, leafarea ratio and leaf weight ratio strongly decreased with advancingplant age. The effects of irradiance treatment on RGR and NARwere analogous to those on total dry weight while the reversepattern was observed for the LAR. A decrease in day temperaturedecreased the RGR. The effects of night temperature exhibitedstrong interactions with day temperature and photoperiod. Theinfluence of temperature on RGR was largely mediated throughchanges in the LAR. The latter parameter was highly correlatedwith the specific leaf weight. Capsicum annuum L., sweet pepper, growth analysis, irradiance, temperature, plant age  相似文献   

4.
Accumulation of dry weight and leaf plus stem area were measuredin Echinochloa utilis and E. frumentacea grown at temperatureregimes from 15/10°C to 33/28°C (day/night). Tilleringand height were recorded in addition to leaf number which wassubsequently used as a developmental index. In both species shoot dry weight increased with temperatureup to 33/28°C; the increase in relative growth rate (RGR)was negligible above 27/22°C. Below 27/22°C the RGRof E. frumentacea decreased sharply and at 15/10°C it madeno effective growth. At low temperatures the RGR of E. frumentaceawas lower than that of E. utilis due to slow leaf area expansion,and in particular smaller individual leaves. E. frumentaceatillered more than E. utilis. Plant development was retardedat low temperatures but was not as responsive to temperatureas dry weight and leaf area. The different responses to temperatureof the two species were described in equations suitable forinclusion in predictive growth models. Echinochloa spp., millet, growth, development, temperature, relative growth rate  相似文献   

5.
Tomato seedlings were grown at constant temperatures of 25°and 15° C. in a 12-hour day at light intensities of 1,600,800, and 400 f.c. The rate of increase in size of the shootapex and the rates of formation and growth of leaf primordiaduring the vegetative phase were followed by dissecting samplesfrom the time of cotyledon emergence onwards. The rate of enlargement of the shoot apex increased with lightintensity, but apical enlargement was delayed at the highertemperature, the delay being longer the lower the light intensity.The rates of leaf formation and leaf growth increased with bothtemperature and light intensity. Temperature had a larger effecton leaf growth than on leaf formation. More leaves were formedbefore flowering at 25° C. than at 15° C., the increasein leaf number being greater the lower the light intensity. It is suggested that the delay in the enlargement of the apexat high temperature can be explained in terms of competitionfor assimilate, the competitive potential of the expanding leafprimordia exceeding that of the apex at higher temperatures.  相似文献   

6.
Different cultivars of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) were grownin cabinets, under a 12 h photoperiod, at constant temperatures,and high day/low night and low day/high night temperatures.Plants were also transferred at different ages, between 18/10°C and 10/18 °C regimes. Application of the growth regulatorsCCC and TIBA was tested at 18/10 °C and GA3 and IAA at 10/18°C. The reversal of day and night temperatures did not affect spikedifferentiation or the numbers of leaves and elongating internodes.However, tillering and tiller development were markedly promotedby the low day/high night temperature regimes whereas the elongationof leaf blades and stem internodes were suppressed under theseregimes. These effects were attributed to the effects of thetemperature regimes on the endogenous hormone balance of theplants. Considering the results of the transfer and growth regulatortreatments it was concluded that there were no obligatory associationsamong the number of tillers appearing, their subsequent development,leaf blade length, and stem elongation. It is suggested thatthe study of the physiological mechanisms controlling thesecharacters may benefit from experimentation under reciprocallydiffering day night temperature regimes.  相似文献   

7.
Sugar beet plants were grown for 12 weeks from emergence ingrowth rooms at temperatures of 10, 17, 24 and 31 °C and20, 50, 80, and 110 cal visible radiation cm-2d-1, and the changeswith time in their dry weight, leaf area, leaf numbers, andstorage root sugar determined. The first stage of growth wasdominated by the development of the shoot, but the storage rootgradually assumed increasing importance and eventually grewat a faster rate and to a greater weight than the shoot. Therelative growth rate and final yield of dry matter of the shootwere greatest at 24 °C and of the root between 17 and 24°C. The relative rate of expansion and the final area ofthe leaf surface were also greatest at 24 °C, whilst therates of production and of unfolding of leaves were greatestat about 17 °C. All these attributes were increased withincreased radiation. Net assimilation rate increased almostproportionately with radiation and was not significantly affectedby temperature.The relationships of total leaf area with plantdry weight, root dry weight with shoot dry weight, and totalleaf number with plant dry weight were scarcely affected bychanges in radiation, but were much influenced by temperature.Plants of the same dry weight generally had bigger roots andsmaller areas of leaf surface as temperatures departed from24 °C and had most leaves at 17 °C. Sugar concentrationsin the storage root were greatest at 17 °C, but the totalamount of sugar was about the same at 17 and 24 °C. Theconcentration of sugar in the storage root depended on rootsize.Thus, temperature affected both the rate and pattern ofdevelopment, and radiation affected the rate but not the patternof development.  相似文献   

8.
《Aquatic Botany》1987,29(3):227-243
Experiments are described in which seedlings of Typha orientalis Presls were grown for up to 6 months under precise conditions of temperature and photoperiod; photosynthesis was by natural daylight and did not vary between treatments. Variable treatments were imposed either from the seedling stage or on large plants raised under constant conditions.In general, total dry matter production increased as photoperiod increased from 8 to 16 h and also as day or night temperature increased, maximum production occurring when there was a warm day (30 or 27°C) and a small temperature drop (to 22°C) at night. The distribution of dry matter was also markedly affected by the imposed variables, leaf growth being favoured by high temperatures (to 30°C) and long photoperiods, and production of roots and rhizomes by low temperatures (to 10°C) and short photoperiods. None of the treatments resulted in floral initiation. The results are considered in relation to growth in the natural habitat.  相似文献   

9.
Two experiments are reported in which young plants of tall fescuewere grown in temperature regimes of 20 °C day/15 °Cnight or 10 °C day/5 °C night until the fourth leafon the main stem was fully expanded. These temperature regimeswere then either changed over for individual plants or continuedunchanged up to the seven-leaf stage. Photosynthesis and respirationrates were determined in the fourth and subsequent leaves andalso in ageing leaves, using an infra-red gas analyser in anopen system and at temperatures of 10 and 20 °C in one and10, 15, 20, and 25 °C in the other experiment. Rates of apparent photosynthesis per unit leaf area in fullyexpanded leaves differed little as a result of previous treatmentand were not greatly affected by temperature during measurement.However, the specific leaf area and the rate of apparent photosynthesisper unit dry weight were higher in plants grown at the hightemperature. Leaves from the high-temperature regime had a higheroptimum temperature for apparent photosynthesis, a shorter life,and a lower respiration rate at any one temperature of measurementthan did leaves from the low-temperature regime. After transfer from one temperature regime to the other, therate of apparent photosynthesis of the next leaf to become fullyexpanded was higher in plants transferred from low to high temperatureand lower in plants transferred from high to low than in plantsremaining in either temperature regime; the leaves which subsequentlyexpanded had rates similar to those of unchanged plants. Inleaves which were fully expanded at the time of transfer, therate of apparent photosynthesis rose after transfer to the high-temperatureregime and fell after transfer to the low-temperature regime. These results are discussed in relation to growth-analysis datafrom other plants grown in the same conditions.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of light and temperature on the germination and growth of Luffa aegyptiaca were investigated both in the laboratory and in the field. The seeds germinated in both darkness and light but germination was better in the light. At constant temperatures germination was best at 21°C, while alternating temperatures of 21 and 31°C and 15 and 41°C caused higher germination than the most favourable constant temperature. Constant temperatures of 15 and 31°C and alternating temperatures of 21 and 41°C resulted in very low germination, whereas no germination occurred at 41°C and at alternating temperatures of 31 and 41°C. Soil depth caused only a delay in seed germination, as it did not affect the total germination. High temperature and high light intensity resulted in good seedling growth in terms of dry weight, leaf area and relative growth rate. High temperature and low light intensity caused increased plant height and high shoot weight ratio, both of which manifested in seedling etiolation. They also caused high leaf area ratio. Under low temperatures, irrespective of light intensity, growth was generally poor, but it was significantly poorer under low light intensity, which also caused high root weight ratio. High light intensity was principally responsible for high leaf weight ratio. The results help to explain the abundance of the species in newly cleared areas in Lagos and its environs.  相似文献   

11.
Dry weight of plant fractions, leaf area, leaf number and tillernumber were recorded throughout primary growth and two subsequentre-growths of hybrid Pennisetum (Pennisetum americanum x P.purpureum) at five temperature regimes from 15/10 °C to33/28 °C (day/night) in summer and winter. Seedling mortality occurred at 15/10 °C, whereas at allhigher temperatures seedlings survived and plants re-grew aftercutting at a height of 10 cm. Shoot weights increased with temperatureup to 33/28 °C when compared at a common chronological agebut showed no differences at a common developmental age. Thetemperature response was associated with increased top/rootratio and rate of leaf appearance; mean individual leaf areaand NAR did not increase beyond 27/22 °C. Shoot weight incrementsin primary growth were the same in winter and summer when expressedper unit of radiation, although leaf area per unit weight wassensitive to changes in radiation associated with differencesin daylength. The rate of shoot weight accumulation in regrowthwas greater than in primary growth because of rapid tilleringfollowing defoliation and an enhanced rate of leaf appearanceper tiller. Pennisetum hybrid, tallgrass, growth, regrowth temperature response  相似文献   

12.
Shoot--root Plasticity and Episodic Growth in Red Pine Seedlings   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
DREW  A. P. 《Annals of botany》1982,49(3):347-357
Red pine seedlings of a half-sib seed source were grown in growthchambers under thermoperiodic regimes of 30/20 °C, 25/15°C and 20/10 °C day/night temperatures. Classical growthanalyses based on weekly harvests of leaves, stem and rootswere employed to study the first 3 to 15 weeks of seedling development.Leaf and root growth were inversely related and episodic. Significantshort term surges in growth of either organ were effective inreversing periodic imbalances that occurred, thus maintaininga long term dry weight equilibrium between above and below groundseedling parts. Adaptive plasticity in the leaf-root balanceat different temperatures gave plants grown at 25/15 °Ca larger proportion of leaves relative to roots and a greatersize compared to seedlings grown under other regimes. Episodicfluctuations in leaf and root growth occurred simultaneouslywith depressions in net assimilation rate. Apparently, balancedgrowth is maintained at an assimilatory cost to the plant, periodic‘corrections’ of shoot—root imbalances requiringcarbohydrate conversion and energy expenditure. Pinus resinosa Ait., red pine, episodic growth, shoot—root balance, plasticity, net assimilation rate, growth analysis  相似文献   

13.
Two Phaseolus vulgaris L. cultivars were grown at 20/15, 25/20,and 30/25 °C day/night temperatures in growth chambers witha 16 h thermoperiod corresponding to the photoperiod. When thefirst trifoliolate leaf was fully expanded rates of CO2 exchange(CER) were measured at 27 °C and saturating light usinginfrared gas analysis. Stomatal (rs) and mesophyll resistances,CO2 compensation points, activities of the enzymes ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPCase), glycolate oxidase (GAO),malate dehydrogenase (MDH), and fructose-1, 6 diphosphate (FDP),chlorophyll content, Hill activities, and leaf anatomy at boththe light and electron microscope level were also investigatedin these leaves. Rates of CO2 exchange in the light, transpiration rate, andchlorophyll content increased with increasing growth temperaturewhile leaf thickness, specific leaf weight, RuBPCase activity,compensation point, and stomatal resistance decreased. Mesophyllresistance also decreased when calculated assuming zero chloroplastCO2 concentration (rm, o), but not when calculated assuminga chloroplast CO2 concentration equal to the CO2 compensationconcentration (rm, g). Average leaf size was maximal in 25/20°C plants while dark respiration, MDH activity, stomataldensity, and starch were minimal. The activities of GAO andFDP and Hill activity were not affected by temperature pretreatment.  相似文献   

14.
Silbernagel has described a test for selecting cultivars ofPhaseolus vulgaris L. which exhibit rapid seedling emergenceat low temperatures, and using this test has identified threecold-tolerant cultivars. We have compared the growth of thesecultivars with that of three control cultivars. Both at 25/20°C and at 20/15 °C day/night temperatures, Silbernagel'scultivars emerged more rapidly than the controls. This was dueto more rapid hypocotyl elongation, not to earlier germination.Rapid hypocotyl elongation was associated with high relativegrowth rates of the seedling axis and rapid loss in weight ofthe cotyledons. After emergence, cotyledons of all cultivarscontinued to lose weight at a constant exponential rate. Relativegrowth rates of the axes were not constant but declined withtime. There was no evidence that genotypic differences in growthrates before emergence were reflected in growth rates afteremergence. A simple quantitative analysis suggested that thedecline in axis relative growth rate after emergence was dueto a declining contribution from cotyledonary reserves. There were significant differences between cultivars in theinitial weight of the seedling axis. Axis weight (A) was notlinearly proportional to seed weight (S), but the curvilinearallometric relationship A = 0.0773 S0.697 satisfactorily accountedfor most of the variation in initial axis weight between cultivars.In all cultivars, axis weights at emergence were smaller inthe cool regime than in the warm, because low temperatures depressedaxis relative growth rates relative to the rate of emergence.The biggest difference between the Q10 of relative growth rate,and of emergence rate, and hence the biggest effect of low temperatureon axis weight at emergence, occurred in the cold-susceptiblecultivar Seafarer. However, genotypic cold tolerance duringthe period when growth is dependent on reserves did not appearto guarantee cold tolerance during the main period of growth. Phaseolus vulgaris, L., bean, seedling growth, temperature, cold tolerance  相似文献   

15.
In earlier work the effects of light intensity over the range31 to 250 J cm–2 day–1 and carbon dioxide concentrationfrom 325 to 900 ppm with 8-h days at 18.3 °C and 16-h nightsat 15.6 °C were described. The present paper is concernedwith three further experiments with light levels up to 375 Jcm–2 day–1 (which corresponds to the daily totalin a glasshouse in southern England in early May or August andthe intensity is approximately that of mid-winter sunshine),carbon dioxide concentration up to 1500 ppm, and day temperaturesof 18.3 to 29.4 °C. Final plant weight was increased by light over the range 125–375J cm–2 day–1 and by carbon dioxide over the range325–900 ppm, with positive interaction between them; thisinteraction was increased by raising the temperature to 23.9°C and somewhat more at 29.4 °C day temperature. Leaf-arearatio and specific leaf area were reduced by increasing eitherlight or carbon dioxide but there was little effect of temperature.Leaf-weight ratios were uniform within experiments but therewere small consistent differences between one experiment andthe other two which also affected leaf-area ratios. Mean unit leaf rate was scarcely affected by day temperatureover the range investigated. There were the usual increasesdue to increased light and carbon dioxide concentration anda consistent difference in absolute value between one experimentand the other two. These differences in mean unit leaf rateare illustrated in detail in the ontogenetic trend of unit leafrate and plant size. Lower unit leaf rates were to a considerableextent compensated for by increased leaf-area ratios in theusual way. Despite the substantial differences in day temperature the specificwater contents (g water g dry weight–1) differed little,showing in the majority of cases higher values in the highertemperature for otherwise similar treatment combinations. Flower development was somewhat delayed at 23.9 °C day temperature,and substantially so at 29.4 °C. Lateral branch length wasincreased at 23.9 °C and excessively so at 29.4 °C.This reveals quite clearly that a temperature optimum for vegetativegrowth may not be the optimum for flowering performance norproduce a desirable plant shape. Despite the marked effects of temperature on rate of flowerdevelopment, the relationship between flower development andthe ratio of flower to total weight was the same for all treatmentcombinations in all three experiments and coincident with thatreported earlier. Gasometric determinations indicated that respiratory loss bythe whole plant was a smaller proportion of net photosyntheticgain at a temperature of 29.4 °C than at 18.3 °C andwas likewise a smaller proportion at 1500 ppm carbon dioxidethan at 325 ppm. If photorespiration of leaves is assumed tobe as great as their dark respiration, the respiratory lossesare in the range of 31–50 per cent of the gross gain.Greater rates of photorespiration would increase the proportionaterespiratory loss.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of three day/night temperatures (18/12 C, 24/18 C, and 30/24 C), and two types of containers (clay and plastic) on the seedling growth of three F1 hybrid annuals were determined after 14 days of controlled-environment treatment. A day/night temperature of 18/12 C was severely limiting to the early seedling growth of ‘Blue Blazer’ ageratum (Ageratum houstonianum Mill.), ‘Pink Cascade’ petunia (Petunia hybrida Vilm.), and ‘Double Eagle’ marigold (Tagetes erecta L.). Raising the day/night temperature to 24/18 C resulted in striking increases in growth in both clay and plastic pots. Fresh and dry weights of tops for all three species were increased four- to fivefold, and leaf areas of ageratum and petunia were increased more than fivefold irrespective of container. Height and node number were also increased significantly but to a much lesser degree. A day/night temperature of 30/24 C appeared to be optimum for early seedling growth of F1 hybrid annuals the optimum being based on dry matter accumulation, stem elongation, node development, and leaf area production. Growth of lateral shoots was greatly stimulated at 30/24 C, especially in marigold. There were no appreciable differences in fresh or dry weight of tops or in leaf area between plants in clay and plastic containers at any of the three day/night temperatures.  相似文献   

17.
Field studies of factors affecting yield and composition ofJapanese mint oil are confounded by interacting environmentalagencies. The effect of temperature, separated from other influences,was examined on Japanese mint (Mentha arvensis L. var. piperascensHolmes) in the naturally lit controlled environment Phytotron,Canberra, Australia. The So Wo I variety of Japanese mint wasgrown under 12 treatments consisting of four day and three nighttemperatures. Maximum leaf, stem and root dry matter was producedunder 30 °C day temperatures, regardless of night temperature,but maximum stolon growth occurred at 20 °C temperatures.Generally, oil yield could be estimated by determining dry matterof above ground parts, but number of oil glands on the leavesdid not provide a reliable indication of oil yield. Differenttemperature treatments did not appear to affect greatly thepercentage of menthol, an important component of the oil. Underfield conditions, maximum yield of Japanese mint oil has beenfound to occur during flowering. This close relationship betweenoil yield and flowering did not occur under extremes of temperature.Although 30 °C was found to be the optimum day temperaturefor oil yield in this experiment where only one harvest wasmade, it is possible that where multiple harvests are conducted,a lower optimum temperature might be found, since the highertemperature was detrimental to dry matter reserves in the stolons. Mentha arvensis L. var. piperascens Holmes, Japanese mint, temperature, controlled environment, menthol, methone, essential oil, flowering  相似文献   

18.
The vegetative growth of four Norwegian ecotypes of Poa pratensisL. was compared at day/night temperatures of 21/12, 21/6, 12/12and 12/6 °C and at photoperiods of 12, 16, 20 and 24 h,the irradiation being approximately equal in all treatments.Tillering within tufts was most abundant in short days and atthe large temperature amplitude. Rhizome formation and elongationwere stimulated by long days and, more strongly, by high daytemperature, but a greater proportion of the rhizomes formedaerial tillers in short days. Long day stimulation of heightgrowth and dry matter accumulation differed between ecotypesbut was generally most pronounced at low temperatures. The NorthNorwegian ecotype ‘Lavang’ had a higher relativegrowth rate and developed two to three times as many rhizomesas its South Norwegian counterparts. Day/night temperature, growth rate, leaf area, photoperiodicity, Poa pratensis L., rhizomes, roots, smooth meadow grass, tillering, weight gain  相似文献   

19.
Pansies (Viola xwittrockiana Gams.) cv. Universal Violet weresown on five dates between Jul. and Dec. 1992 and placed insix temperature-controlled glasshouse compartments set to providemean temperatures between 6.5 and 30 °C. Shoot dry weightand leaf number were recorded. A model was constructed, to analysethe effects of light and temperature on dry matter accumulation,which assumed that relative growth rate (RGR) declined linearlywith thermal time accumulated from sowing, reflecting ontogeneticdrift. Furthermore, it assumed that RGR was a semi-ellipsoidfunction of temperature, rising to an optimum of 25.3 °Cand declining thereafter, and a positive linear function oflight integral. When fitted to data collected in this studythe model accounted for 94% of the variance in RGR. Independentvalidation using data from four further crops grown in glasshousecompartments at four different set point temperatures showedthat the model could also be used to predict plant dry weightaccurately (r 2=0.98). The rate of mainstem leaf productionwas also linearly related to both light integral and temperature. Pansy; Viola xwittrockiana ; temperature; light integral; dry weight; relative growth rate; leaf number  相似文献   

20.
The effect of germination temperature, duration of high-intensitylight, and day temperature in modifying the influence of nighttemperature on the flowering process of the M-8 strain of Uplandcotton was examined. In general, night temperatures above 28°C caused the first floral branch to be formed at a higher node.The magnitude of the reaction was conditioned by the other environmentalfactors studied. Germination temperature had a slight but significanteffect on subsequent floral responses to night temperature.Plants given eight-hour periods of high-intensity light eachday were delayed more by high night temperature than those exposedto 14 or 24 hours of high light. At high day temperatures (28–32°C) the inhibiting influence of the high night temperature wasgreatly increased. High day temperatures delayed floral initiationif the night temperature was high (28–32°C) but causeda lowering of position of first floral branch when the nighttemperature was low (20–22°C). The enhancement offlowering by 32°C days and 22°C nights was expressednot only in the low node of first floral branch, but also inthe shorter time from planting to floral initiation.  相似文献   

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