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1.
Dr. W. K. Purves 《Planta》1961,56(6):684-690
Summary This study concerns the effects of red and far-red light on flowering in the short day plantLemna perpusilla 6746. The critical day length for maximum flowering was found to be 10 hours. Exposure to red light near the middle of the dark period inhibited flowering, and the time of maximum sensitivity to red light occurred 9 hours after the beginning of dark periods of either 14 or 17 hours. The inhibition by red light was not reversible by far-red light, which also inhibited flowering, especially when given early in the dark period. Flowering inhibited by exposure to far-red light at the beginning of the dark period could be restored by subsequent exposure to red light. It appears that two photoperiodic partial processes in some plants may be controlled by the red, far-red reversible pigment system.With 5 Figures in the Text  相似文献   

2.
A study was made of the effects of various durations, intensities and combinations of red and far-red light interruptions on the flowering responses of Xanthium pensylvanicum Wallr. A dual response to treatments of far-red light was observed. In short dark periods, far-red light alone did not greatly affect flowering but was able to overcome the inhibition of flowering caused by red light. In dark periods longer than 15 hours, far-red inhibited flowering and added to rather than overcame the inhibition by red light. The dark period length required for far-red inhibition remained the same whether far-red was given at the start or at the eighth hour of darkness.

In 48-hour dark periods Xanthium showed 3 responses to additions of red and far-red light breaks: A) response to red light; B) response to far-red light; and C) response to red followed by far-red light. Red light given any time in the first 30 hours of darkness overcame the inhibitory effect of far-red light given at either the start or the eighth hour of darkness. Red light given later than the thirtieth hour did not overcome the far-red effect.

Approximately the same energy of red light was required to overcome the inhibitory effect of far-red at the second hour of darkness as was required to produce maximum red light inhibition at the eighth hour. Although far-red light was most inhibitory when given early in a long dark period, approximately the same energy of far-red light was required to saturate the far-red response at the fourth, eighth and sixteenth hours.

The results are discussed in relation to other reports of far-red inhibition of flowering in short-day plants.

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3.
Abstract Buchnera hispida, a facultative root parasite of grasses and graminaceous crops, has a light requirement for germination. Studies were carried out on the effects of varying photoperiods with or without preceding dark incubation, on seed germination. Buchnera seeds showed long-day behaviour, since they germinated at all photoperiods including continuous light, and longer photoperiods were more effective in triggering seed germination than shorter photoperiods. Also, effects of red and far-red light indicated that the phytochrome system is operative in the light-induced germination of Buchnera. Although dark incubation in water before illumination was not absolutely necessary for germination, it caused the seeds to respond more rapidly to light. The longer the time of the dark incubation the more responsive the seeds were to photoperiod except when 15 min light was given. The effectiveness of a preceding dark incubation in making Buchnera seeds sensitive to rapid light action was completely inhibited at 4°C. This is in agreement with the hypothesis that a reaction partner of the far-red absorbing form of phytochrome is produced during dark incubation of Buchnera seeds. Such an intermediate has also been reported in some positively photoblastic seeds of non-parasitic flowering plants.  相似文献   

4.
Flowering in Lemna gibba, a long-day duckweed, can be inducedunder a short-day condition when the photoperiodic regimes areR7FR3 (7 hr red followed by 3 hr far-red), R5FR5 and R3FR7.This indicates the necessity of a proper balance between redand far-red effects for flowering. The flowering induced bythese regimes is inhibited by a brief exposure to red givenat the start of darkness and this inhibition is reversed bysubsequent exposure to far-red. Thus, the red/far-red reversibleeffect is found only at the beginning of darkness for floweringof L. gibba. However, flowering of L. gibba is promoted by a red light breakgiven near the middle of a 14 hr dark period. The promotiveeffect is not reversed by subsequent exposure to far-red, i.e.,the effect of the red break converts from inhibition to promotionas when given later in the dark period, which suggests the involvementof a timing mechanism. (Received July 21, 1973; )  相似文献   

5.
Lemna paucicostata Hegelm. T-101, a short-day plant, flowers when plants preirradiated with red light (R) for 24 h are subjected to inductive darkness for 72 h followed by two short-day cycles (6 h R+ 18 h dark). However, flowering is inhibited by blue-or far-red-light pulses applied at the beginning of the inductive dark period. These inhibitory light effects are fully reversible by a R pulse. The action spectra for the inhibitory light effect and for its reversal show that the light pulses act exclusively through phytochrome. It is concluded that a low level of Pfr at the beginning of the inductive dark period prevents flowering.Abbreviations R red (light) - B blue (light) - FR far-red (light)  相似文献   

6.
Intermediate-day plants (IDP) flower most rapidly and completely under intermediate photoperiods (e.g., 12–14 h of light), but few species have been identified and their flowering responses are not well understood. We identified Echinacea purpurea Moench as an IDP and, based on our results, propose a novel mechanism for flowering of IDP. Two genotypes of E. purpurea ('Bravado' and 'Magnus') flowered most completely (≥79%) and rapidly and at the youngest physiological age under intermediate photoperiods of 13–15 h. Few (≤14%) plants flowered under 10- or 24-h photoperiods, indicating E . purpurea is a strongly quantitative IDP. Plants were also induced to flower when 15-h dark periods were interrupted with as few as 7.5 min of low-intensity lighting (night interruption, NI). Flowering was progressively earlier as the NI increased to 1 h, but was delayed when the NI was extended to 4 h. Stem length increased by ≥230% as the photoperiod or NI duration increased, until plants received a saturating duration (at 14 or 1 h, respectively). Flowering was inhibited when 16-h photoperiods were deficient in red (R, 600–700 nm) light, and was promoted when photoperiods were deficient in far-red (FR, 700–800 nm) light. Because of our results, we propose the flowering behavior of IDP such as E . purpurea is composed of two mechanisms: a light-dependent response operating through light-labile (type I) phytochrome in which flowering is inhibited by an LD, and a light-stable (type II) phytochrome (i.e., phyB, D and E) response in which flowering is promoted by a short-night.  相似文献   

7.
SARKAR  K. K.; SIRCAR  S. M. 《Annals of botany》1975,39(5):1063-1070
One cultivated and two wild rice varieties have been subjectedto variation in photoperiod and light quality by daily exposureof the seedlings at the four-leaf stage to 8 h of natural daylightfollowed by white incandescent, red, green or blue light for2,4 or 8 h in a temperature and humidity-controlled growth chamber.In some cases far-red irradiation was applied after white orred for 1 and 2 h. The treatments caused marked differencesin growth and reproduction between the cultivated and wild rices.The cultivar Dudkalmi showed extensive tillering after far-redexposure. Earliest flowering was observed with a 16-h dark periodboth in the cultivated and wild rices. Failure of floweringwith and 8-h day and 8-h artificial light of different wavelengthscould be overcome by red or far-red of 1-h duration. The lightquality interacted differently with the dark period in the accelerationof flowering in the three varieties. In another experiment theeffects of interruption of the dark period by a light periodof 2 h after from 4–12 h of darkness in a 24-h cycle werestudied in the two wild rice varieties. Light of different wavelengthsinterposed in the dark period caused variation in tiller numberand stem length in comparison to an uninterrupted dark periodof 16 h. The effect at the beginning of the dark period wasearlier flowering; flowering was delayed by interruption at4 h and inhibited after 8 h but accelerated after a 10- to 12-hdark period. The results are discussed in the light of the significanceof the dark period and light quality in regulating hormone balanceand phytochrome reactions.  相似文献   

8.
Three-day-old etiolated seedlings of Pharbitis nil were exposedto red light for 10 min and sprayed with N6-benzyladenine beforetransfer to a 48-h inductive dark period, after which they weregrown under continuous white light. A second red irradiationpromoted flowering when given at the 5 and 24th hour of theinductive dark period but inhibited flowering at the 10 and15th hour. Far-red light inhibited flowering when given at anytime during the first 24 h of the dark period. Red/far-red reversibilitywas clearly observed at the 0, 5, 10 and 24th hour, but notat the 15th hour when both red and far-red lights completelyinhibited flowering. The action spectrum for the inhibition of flowering at the 15thhour of the inductive dark period had a sharply defined peakat 660 nm and closely resembled the absorption spectrum of thePR form of phytochrome. The photoreceptors involved in thesephotoreactions are discussed. (Received June 10, 1983; Accepted July 6, 1983)  相似文献   

9.
Summary The possibility that phytochrome is involved in the promotion of flowering by far-red light was investigated. The addition of far-red (FR) to a day extension with red (R) light promotes inflorescence initiation in Lolium. A 2-hour interruption with darkness also promoted flowering compared with the uninterrupted red light control; apex length was further increased by a 10-minute FR irradiation given before the 2-hour dark interruption and was decreased by 10-minutes of R light given in the middle: both FR promotion and R inhibition were reversed by R and FR respectively. Apex length increased approximately linearly with increasing duration of dark interruption up to at least 2 1/2 hours. When varying ratios of R:FR light were substituted for a 2-hour dark period, apex length was increasingly depressed as the % R was increased above 25%; no difference between 25% R/75% FR and 100% FR could be detected. Apex length was inversely linearly related to the calculated [Pfr]/[P] ratios above about 40% Pfr.FR promoted flowering when given during a 5-hour interruption of a day extension with R light but, between 0.25 and 0.90 J m2 s-1, there was no effect of intensity of FR; at 0.11 J m-2 s-1 apex length was shorter than at 0.25 J m-2 s-1 but longer than in darkness. When the duration of FR (from the beginning of a dark interruption of a day extension with R) was varied, apex length increased with increasing duration of FR up to 1 1/4 to 2 hours but further increasing the duration of FR did not promote flowering more.The results implicate phytochrome in the promotion of flowering by FR light. It has been demonstrated that a low [Pfr]/[P] ratio (less than present in 25% R/75% FR) is needed over a relatively long period of time: this explains why a relatively high proportion of FR light must be added to R for several hours in order to give maximum promotion of flowering. It is concluded that, in Lolium, the increased flowering response to FR light is brought about by a reduction of [Pfr]/[P] ratio at the appropriate time, although the possibility that another effect of far-red is also involved has not been rigorously excluded.  相似文献   

10.
Induction of flowering of etiolated Lemna paucicostata Hegelm. T-101, a short-day plant, was inhibited by far-red (FR) or blue light (BL) applied at the beginning of a 72-h inductive dark period which was followed by two short days. In either case the inhibition was reversed by a subsequent exposure of the plants to near-ultraviolet radiation (NUV), with a peak of effectiveness near 380 nm. Inhibition by BL or FR and its reversion by NUV are repeatable, i.e., NUV is acting in these photoresponses like red light although with much lower effectiveness. Thus, it is considered that NUV acts through phytochrome and no specific BL and NUV photoreceptor is involved in photocontrol of floral induction on this plant.Abbreviations BL blue light - FR far-red light - NUV near ultraviolet radiation - P red-absorbing form of phytochrome - Pfr far-red absorbing form of phytochrome - R red light  相似文献   

11.
D. Francis 《Protoplasma》1981,107(3-4):285-299
Summary 28-day-old plant ofSilene coeli-rosa were exposed at 1,700 hours to 5 or 10 minutes red light, 5 or 10 minutes far-red light, red followed by far-red, far-red followed by red or maintained in darkness. Measurements of the proportions of cells with the 2 C and 4 C amounts of DNA in the shoot apex of the plants, sampled at 2,000 hours, showed that far-red light promoted an increase in the G2 proportion whereas red light resulted in an increase in the G1 proportion of the cell cycle, relative to the dark controls. Moreover these changes were red, far-red reversible. All light treatments resulted in increases in the mitotic index in the apex compared with the dark controls, suggesting increases in the growth rate. The data implicate phytochrome in a low energy response and suggest that, in the shoot apex, G1 is shortened markedly following exposure to farred light, whilst G2 is shortened the most following exposure to red light. The results are discussed in relation to flower-initiation.  相似文献   

12.
Seedlings ofPharbitis nil, strain Violet, were exposed to ultraviolet (UV, 254 nm) light at various times of a 16-hr dark period for 60, 90, and 120 sec. When UV light was given at the 6th hr of the dark period, flowering was most inhibited irrespective of UV dosages. The inhibition pattern of flowering caused by UV light was similar to that caused by red light. Contribution No. 101 from the Department of Biology, Miyazaki University.  相似文献   

13.
Floral Inhibition of Biloxi Soybean During a 72-hour Cycle   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Shumate WH  Reid HB  Hamner KC 《Plant physiology》1967,42(11):1511-1518
The inhibitory effect of light interruptions given during the photophobe phases of a 72-hour cycle was studied with Biloxi soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.]. The basic 72-hour cycle consisted of 8 hours of light followed by 64 hours of darkness and was repeated 7 times. Supplementary white light treatments given at the twenty-fourth and/or forty-eighth hour of the cycle (photophil phases) promoted the flowering levels of the controls and kept light treatments given at the most inhibitory points from inhibiting flowering completely. Such supplementary light treatments did not affect the time of maximum sensitivity to light interruptions. When 30-minute light breaks were used, maximum inhibition occurred at the 16-, 43-, and 63-hour points. The duration of the light breaks affected the time of maximum inhibition when given during the second photophobe phase. The time of maximum inhibition occurred earlier with 4-hour light breaks than with either 3-minute or 2-hour light interruptions.

Three-minute red light interruptions produced essentially the same effect as 3-minute white light interruptions. Such treatments inhibited flowering completely in the first photophobe phase, inhibited flowering to only a small degree in the second photophobe phase, and inhibited flowering to an intermediate degree in the third photophobe phase. Far-red light interruptions strongly inhibited flowering in the first photophobe phase, especially when given early in the dark period. Three minutes of supplementary white light given at the twenty-fourth or forty-eighth hour of the cycle partially overcame the inhibitory effect of far-red light. Four hours of supplementary white light at these times completely overcame the far-red inhibition.

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14.
Seeds of two cultivars, H-14 and J-34 of Gossypium hirsutumL. soaked in the dark for durations of 8, 12 and 16 hr wereexposed to red and far-red radiations alone and in differentsuccessions. While cv. J-34 was unresponsive to all light treatments,seed germinaiton in cv.H-14 was promoted by darkness and byexposure to far-red radiation and was inhibited by red andwhitelight.Seed germination depended upon what treatment was given at theend. The effect ofred light was reversed by far-red and viceversa. Although instances of light inhibition of seed germinationare known, the authors are not aware of any clear cut instancein the literature on far-red promotion of seed germination (Received November 4, 1970; )  相似文献   

15.
Summary The mode of phytochrome control of elongation growth was studied in fully-green strawberry (Fragaria x Ananassa Duch.) plants. Petiole growth showed two distinct types of response to light. In one, the end-of-day response, petioles were lengthened by low-intensity far-red irradiation for 1 h immediately following the 8 h photoperiod. The response was little or no greater with prolonged exposure and less when the start of far-red was delayed. It was already evident in the first leaf to emerge after treatment began. With the development of successive leaves a second, photoperiodic, type of response appeared, in which petioles lengthened following only prolonged exposure to red, far-red, mixtures of the two, or tungsten lighting, all at low levels of intensity. As with the inhibition of flowering in previous experiments, irradiation with red light during the second half of the otherwise long dark period gave the greatest response.Abbreviations and Symbols FR far-red light - HIR high irradiance response - R red light - Pr phytochrome in the red light absorbing form - Pfr phytochrome in the far-red light absorbing form - SDP short-day plant - LDP long-day plant - PAR photosynthetically active radiation  相似文献   

16.
In a new strain of short-day duckweed (Lemna paucicostata T-101), blue and far-red light-induced inhibition of flowering was investigated. Flowering of this strain failed to be induced under a short-day photoperiod of blue and far-red light, although it responded as a typical short-day plant in red and white light. When the short-day photoperiod of blue or far-red light was terminated by a 15 min red light pulse, flowering recovered completely. This inducing effect of red light was reversed by subsequent exposure to far-red light. Furthermore, it could be demonstrated that 30 min of blue light completely reversed the flowering inductive effect of 5 min red light and vice versa. Evidence is presented suggesting that the inhibitory action of blue and far red light may be due to the lowering of phytochrome Pfr levels below those required to start the dark reactions which lead to flowering. These results are discussed in relation to the time measurement system of photoperiodism.  相似文献   

17.
Flowering response and plant form of photomorphogenic mutants (hy1, hy2, hy3, hy4 and hy5) of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.), a long-day plant, were examined in long and short days. There were only slight differences among genotypes including Landsberg wild type with respect to the flowering time under long days. The effect of 1 h light-(night)-breaks of far-red, red, blue and white light given in the middle of the dark period of plants grown under short days, was studied. Effects of far-red light applied at the end or the beginning of the main photoperiod on flowering and plant form were also examined. The light-breaks with all the above mentioned light qualities promoted floral initiation of all the genotypes including the wild type in terms of both the flowering time and the number of rosette leaves. In general, far-red light was most effective. It is possible to classify the hy-mutants into 3 groups by their responses to light-breaks under short day conditions: (a) Mutants hy2 and hy3, which have a reduced number of rosette leaves, and flower early. Red light is as effective as far-red light. The wavelength of light-breaks is relatively unimportant for flowering response. (b) Mutants hy4, hy5 and Landsberg wild type, which have a greater number of rosette leaves, and flower relatively late. The effectiveness of light-breaks is in the following order, far-red, blue, and red light, which is in reverse order to the transformation of phytochrome to the Pfr form. (c) Mutant hy1, which behaves anomalously with respect to relations between flowering time and number of rosette leaves; late flowering with reduced number of rosette leaves. Red, blue and far-red light are effective, but white light is ineffective for reducing the number of rosette leaves. When far-red light was given in the middle of the night or at the end of the main photoperiod, it markedly reduced the number of rosette leaves compared to those grown under short days for all the genotypes, while when applied at the beginning of the main photoperiod far-red light did not affect the number of rosette leaves. Different effects on the plant form dependent on the time of treatment with far-red light-breaks are also discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Racial differences based on flowering response to several photoperiods were detectable in two widely separated populations of white snakeroot, Eupatorium rugosum Houtt. The most favorable photoperiod for advanced flowering in Georgia stocks was 12 hr, for those from North Dakota, 14 hr. The difference in latitude between these populations was approximately 12° and represents a mean difference of 75 days in the frost-free season. Under noninductive photoperiod a 1-hr interruption of white light in the middle of 15 hr of darkness stimulated floral initiation in North Dakota plants, whereas the same application at the beginning or at the end of the dark period failed to produce flower buds. The effect of red light (660 mμ) for 10 min given in the middle of the long night was similar to white light on the northern strain, and was negated by far-red (730 mμ). Georgia stocks initiated flowering under 15 hr of darkness but were retarded by white light applied in the middle of the period, thus differing in basic response from North Dakota plants. Red light, in contrast to effects observed in North Dakota plants, retarded initiation of flower buds. This effect was offset by far-red light. When compared with other studies on long-day and short-day species our results suggest that photoperiodic adaptations related to latitudinal distribution occur in white snakeroot. The North Dakota strain showed correspondence to long-day types while short-day tendencies were exhibited by Georgia plants.  相似文献   

19.
The role of gibberellins in the photoperiodic flower induction of short-day plant Pharbitis nil has been investigated. It has been found that the endogenous content of gibberellins in the cotyledons of P. nil is low before and after a 16-h-long inductive dark period. During the inductive night the content of gibberellins is high at the beginning of darkness and about the middle of the dark period. Exogenous GA3 when applied to the cotyledons of non-induced plants does not replace the effect of the inductive night but it can stimulate the intensity of flowering in plants cultivated on suboptimal photoperiods. GA3 could also reverse the inhibitory effect of end-of-day far-red light irradiation on P. nil flowering. 2-Chloroethyltri-methylammonium chloride (CCC) applied to the cotyledons during the inductive night also inhibited flowering. GA3 could reverse the inhibitory effect of CCC. The obtained results strongly suggest that gibberellins are involved in the phytochrome controlled transition of P. nil to flowering. Their effect could be additive to that of photoperiodic induction.  相似文献   

20.
Reversible floral responses of Lemna perpusilla to red and far-redlights appeared only at the beginning of the inductive darkperiod when the 8 hr photoperiod consisted of white or red light.When blue or far-red light was given during the 8 hr photoperiod,the far-red given at the beginning of the dark period scarcelyinhibited flowering; red/far-red reversibility newly appearedat the middle of the dark period. This indicates that the photoregulationsystem in the flowering of L. perpusilla can be converted fromthe Pharbitis type to the Xanthium type by changing the lightquality of the main photoperiod from white or red to blue orto far-red, which is known to be effective for the so-calledhigh-energy photoreaction of photomorphogenesis. (Received July 2, 1975; )  相似文献   

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