首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 578 毫秒
1.
In many plant species, including chrysanthemum, a strong positive correlation between internode length and DIF [difference between day (DT) and night (NT) temperature] has been observed. However, Langton and Cockshull (1997. Scientia Horticulturae 69: 229-237) reported no such relationship and showed that absolute DT and NT explained internode length rather than DIF. To investigate these conflicting results and to clarify the validity of the DIF concept, cut chrysanthemums (Chrysanthemum 'Reagan Improved') were grown in growth chambers at all 16 combinations of four DT and four NT (16, 20, 24 and 28 degrees C) with a 12 h day length. Length of internode 10, number of internodes and stem length were measured on days 5, 10, 17, 22 and 27 after starting the temperature treatments. Internode length on day 10 showed a positive linear relationship with DIF (R2 = 0.64). However, when internodes had reached their final length in all treatments (day 27), a much stronger positive linear relation was observed (R2 = 0.81). A model to predict final internode length was developed based on the absolute DT and NT responses: both responses were optimum curves and no significant interaction between DT and NT occurred [final internode length (mm) = -32.23 + 3.56DT + 1.08NT - 0.0687DT2 - 0.0371NT2; R2 = 0.91, where TD is day temperature and TN is night temperature]. It is shown that DIF can predict final internode length only within a temperature range where effects of DT and NT are equal in magnitude and opposite in sign (18-24 degrees C). Internode appearance rate, as well as stem length formed during the experiment, showed an optimum response to DT.  相似文献   

2.
Lilium tongiflorum Thunb. cv. ‘Nellie White’ plantswere grown in different day/night temperature (DT/NT) environmentsto determine the anatomical basis for differential responsesof stem elongation to DT and NT. Lilium plants were forced in1986 and 1987 under 25 and 12 different DT/NT environments,respectively, with temperatures ranging from 14 to 30 °C.Parenchyma and epidermal cell length and width were measuredin stem tissue (1987) and epidermal cell length and width weremeasured in leaf tissue (1986). Total cell number per internodeand vertical cell number per internode were calculated. Stemparenchyma and stem and leaf epidermal cell length increasedlinearly as the difference (DIF) between DT and NT increased(DIF = DT —- NT), i.e. as DT increased relative to NT.DIF had no effect on stem parenchyma width, stem and leaf epidermalcell width, or cell number per internode. Data suggested thatstem elongation responses to DIF are elicited primarily througheffects on cell elongation and not division. Key words: Thermoperiodism, thermomorphogenesis, stem elongation, DIF, cell division, cell elongation, leaf expansion  相似文献   

3.
Stem elongation in Fuchsia × hybrida was influenced by cultivation at different day and night temperatures or in different light qualities. Internode elongation of plants grown at a day (25°C) to night (15°C) temperature difference (DIF+10) in white light was almost twofold that of plants grown at the opposite temperature regime (DIF−10). Orange light resulted in a threefold stimulation of internode elongation compared with white light DIF−10. Surprisingly, internode elongation in orange light was similar for plants grown at DIF−10 and DIF+10. Flower development was accelerated at DIF−10 compared with DIF+10 in both white and orange light. To examine whether the effects of DIF and light quality on shoot elongation were related to changes in gibberellin metabolism or plant sensitivity to gibberellins (GAs), the stem elongation responses of paclobutrazol-treated plants to applied gibberellins were determined. In the absence of applied gibberellins paclobutrazol (>0.32 μmol plant−1) strongly retarded shoot elongation. This inhibition was nullified by the application of about 10–32 nmol of GA1, GA4, GA9, GA15, GA19, GA20, GA24, or GA44. The results are discussed in relation to possible effects of DIF and light quality on endogenous gibberellin levels and gibberellin sensitivity of fuchsia and their effects on stem elongation. Received October 4, 1997; accepted December 17, 1997  相似文献   

4.
Stem elongation and leaf orientation in Lilium longiflorum Thunb. were influenced more by the difference (DIF) between day temperature (DT) and night temperature (NT) than absolute DT or NT from 14 to 30 C. Plant height and internode length increased 129 and 382%, respectively, as DIF (DT-NT) increased from –16 to 16 C as compared to only 15 and 58% when either DT or NT was increased from 14 to 30 C, respectively. Leaf orientation, defined as the angle between a line perpendicular to the stem and the line from the leaf base to the leaf tip, increased 43° (leaves became more upright) as DIF increased from –16 to 16 C. In contrast to plant height, internode length, and leaf orientation, leaf and flower length were influenced more by absolute temperature than DIF. Leaf and flower length decreased 32 and 14%, respectively, as NT increased from 14 to 30 C. DT had little effect on either leaf or flower length. The influence of DIF on stem elongation suggested that thermomorphogenesis was not a function of total plant carbohydrate or carbohydrate translocation. Instead, DIF appeared to influence the endogenous gibberellin content or the response of plant tissue to gibberellin. Similarities between thermomorphogenic plant responses and photomorphogenic plant responses suggested that these two processes may be related with respect to their perception and/or transduction.  相似文献   

5.
The role of environment on the dwarfing (short internode) phenomenon of apple (Malus domestisca Borkh.) was investi gated and defined in controlled environmental chambers. Orchard-grown very dwarf, dwarf and semi-dwarf trees obtained by natural sibcrossing of spur-type cv. Golden Delicious and cv. Delicious, as well as standard cv. Golden Delicious, were propagated via in vitro techniques. Growth was rapid and none of the 4 types exhibited dwarf-like characteristics when grown at constant 27°C with 12, 14 or 16 h daylengths. Standard and very dwarf plants grew at nearly the same rate at constant 30°C, whereas growth nearly ceased on both types at constant 35°C after 7 days. Dwarf and very dwarf plants responded differently from standard and semi-dwarf plants when grown under alternating (ramped) night/day temperatures (15 or 20°C night ramped up to a daytime maximum over 8 h of 23, 28, 33 or 38°C, held for 2 h and then ramped down over 5 h to the night temperature). As the night/maximum day temperature differentia) increased from 0 to 23° under the ramping environments, growth of dwarf plants decreased markedly as compared to standard plants. When the same night/maximum day temperature differential occurred, the effect on decreasing shoot length was greater at the higher (20°C) night temperature. Increasing maximum day temperatures under the ramped environment also reduced leaf area plant?1 but did not markedly affect leaf number, resulting in short internodes. When a period of constant temperature was followed by ramped temperatures or vice versa, the sequence of constant vs ramped environments made little difference in the final growth of the 4 plant types. The data point to high temperature as the major factor for causing dwarfing of the sensitive plant types. Increasing the differential between night and maximum day temperature resulted in short internode. dwarf plants with small leaves similar to orchard-grown dwarf trees.  相似文献   

6.
Expansion growth is limited if the difference between day and night temperature (DIF) is negative. Growth is also limited high salinity. Expansion growth of tomato seedlings was studied under day/night temperatures of 16/24°C and 24/16°C, and nutrient solution salinities of 3 and 15 mS cm-1 to ascertain whether interactions exist between the two stress forms. Water status was also studied in order to assess possible mechanisms of growth retardation. A significant interaction between DIF and salinity was found for all recorded growth variables. Hypocotyl length, plant height, leaf area and fresh and dry weight were lower at negative DIF than at positive, the reduction being greater at low salinity than at high. Increased salinity also reduced growth, more so at positive DIF than at negative. Growth reduction at negative DIF was accompanied increased shoot water and osmotic potentials. Pressure potential was unaffected DIF. Growth reduction at high salinity was accompanied reduced water and osmotic potentials. Pre-dawn pressure potential was increased at high salinity, whereas no effect of salinity on pressure potential at midday was found. The differences in effects on water status between the two stress forms may suggest differing mechanisms of growth retardation.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of 16 different day (DT) and night (NT) temperature combinations (DT and NT 12, 17, 22 and 27 degrees C) on rosette leaf growth, flower stem elongation and flowering time in Arabidopsis thaliana Ler was investigated. Final leaf length decreased with increasing NT due to a combination of reduced elongation period and reduced elongation rate. Final stem length increased with increasing DT due to increased elongation rate, and decreased with increasing NT due to a decrease in elongation period. Under NT 27 degrees C, however, stem elongation rate increased greatly, resulting in the same final stem length as under NT 12 degrees C. The transition to flowering was accelerated by increasing NT. A linear regression analysis was performed to clarify the relationship between final leaf length, final stem length and flowering time with DIF (DT minus NT) and/or ADT (average daily temperature). For all three variables, the effect of DIF depended on ADT and vice versa. The relationship of final stem length with DIF also depended on the temperature range. Increased cell volume in flower stems developing at DT/NT 22/12 degrees C gave rise to longer and thicker stems compared with stems developing at DT/NT 12/22 degrees C. GC-MS analysis (gas chromatography-mass spectrometry) showed that the endogenous level of IAA was 56 % higher in stems grown under DT/NT 22/12 degrees C compared with DT/NT 12/22 degrees C. Of the 12 gibberellins analysed, however, only the level of non-bioactive GA29 was affected by the temperature treatment.  相似文献   

8.
Stem elongation can be suppressed by a temperature drop at the onset of the photoperiod (DROP) or with a cooler day than night temperature (DT and NT, respectively), commonly described as DIF (DT ‐ NT). To test our hypothesis that phytochrome A (phyA) mediated the reduction of stem elongation caused by −DIF and DROP, we conducted experiments with photomorphogenic mutants of tomato ( Solarium lycopersicon L.) and transgenic potato ( Solarium tuberosum L.). The plants studied were tomato mutants fri 1 (deficient in phyA) and tri 3 (deficient in phytochrome B1 [phyBl]) and their isogenic wild‐type (WT) cv. Moneymaker, nontransformed potato, and two lines each of antisense phyA (15‐9 and 15‐11) and overexpressed phyA (PS‐2 and PS‐4). Plants were placed in three temperature regimens with a daily mean of 20°C: a constant 20°C (0 DIF), an 8°C DROP for 3 h, and a ‐ 8°C DIF. For all tomato genotypes, −DIF and DROP reduced intemode length by ≥ 21% and stem elongation by 30% compared to that of plants at 0 DIF. Interactions between temperature treatment and genotype were nonsignificant. For potato, −DIF, but not DROP, significantly reduced intemode length of WT (by 39%) and both antisense lines (by 36 or 48%) but only one of the two lines of overexpressed phyA plants (by 18%). The −DIF significantly reduced stem length for only antisense phyA (by 36 or 48%) and WT (by 35%) plants. Thus, at least for tomato and potato, it appears that phyA does not control stem extension in relation to cool‐temperature treatments.  相似文献   

9.
The objective of this work was to study the role of the phytochromes (phy) B, D and E in the thermoperiodic control of elongation and flowering time in Arabidopsis thaliana. WT, and phyB, phyD and phyE single mutants, and phyB phyD and phyB phyE double mutants, were grown under day/night temperatures (DT/NT) of 12/22°C, 17/17°C or 22/12°C (negative, zero and positive DIF, respectively) for inflorescence stem length measurements, and under DT/NT 17/25°C or 25/17°C (negative and positive DIF, respectively) for leaf morphology and flowering time measurements. In WT final length of the stem, petiole and leaf blade were longer under positive DIF compared to negative DIF. The temperature effect was stronger in the leaf petiole than the stem, whereas only a slight change was seen in the leaf blade length direction and none in the width direction. The temperature effect on stem and petiole elongation was reduced or nearly eliminated in the genotypes lacking phyB, while a phyD or a phyE mutation had no influence or a slightly positive influence on the temperature effect, respectively. These results suggest that phyB, and not phyD or phyE, is needed for a complete thermoperiodic control of elongation growth in A. thaliana. For all genotypes tested, plants flowered earlier at negative DIF than positive DIF, suggesting that none of the three phytochromes B, D, or E is needed for a thermoperiodic control of flowering time in A. thaliana.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of day/night temperature regimes on stem elongation and on the content of endogenous gibberellins (GAs) in vegetatively propagated plants of Campanula isophylla cv. Hvit have been studied. Compared with a constant temperature regime at 18°C (18/18°C), stem and internode elongation was enhanced significantly by a combination of high day/low night temperature (21/15°C) and inhibited by an opposite regime (15/21°C). Gibberellins A1, A19, A44, A53, and A97 were identified as endogenous components in Campanula. (GA97 was earlier referred to as 2-OH-GA53.) Quantitative analysis of the endogenous GAs indicates that temperature regimes that stimulate elongation growth are accompanied by an increase in the level of GA1, GA19, and GA44. On the other hand, in plants grown under conditions that reduced stem elongation growth, there was an increased level of GA97.Abbreviations DIF difference between day temperature and night temperature - GA gibberellin - HPLC high performance liquid chromatography - GC-MS gas chromatography-mass chromatography - SPE solid phase extraction - TMS trimethylsilyl - MSTFA N-methyl-N-TMS-trifluoroacetamide - KRI Kovats retention index - SIM selected ion monitoring - D2 deuterated  相似文献   

11.
The effects of thermo- and photoperiodicity on elongation growth and on endogenous level of gibberellins (GAs) in Begonia x hiemalis during various phases of the day-night cycle have been studied. Plant tissue was harvested during the day and night cycle after temperature and photoperiodic treatments and analyzed for endogenous GAs using combined gas chromatography and mass spectrometry. Elongation growth increased when the difference between day and night temperature (DIF = DT − NT) increased from a negative value (−9.0 and −4.5°C) to zero and with increasing photoperiod from 8 to 16 h. When applied to the youngest apical leaf, gibberellins A1, A4, and A9 increased the elongation of internodes and petioles. GA4 had a stronger effect on elongation growth than GA1 and GA9. In relative values, the effect of these GAs decreased when DIF increased from −9 to 0°C. The time of applying the GAs during a day and night cycle had no effect on the growth responses. In general, endogenous levels of GA19 and GA20 were higher under negative DIF compared with zero DIF. The level of endogenous GA1 in short day (SD)-grown plants was higher under zero DIF than under negative DIF, but this relationship did not appear in long day (LD)-grown plants. The main effects of photoperiod seem to be a higher level of GA19 and GA1 at SD compared with LD, whereas GA20 and GA9 show the opposite response to photoperiod. No significant differences in endogenous level of GA1, GA9, GA19, and GA20 were found for various time points during the diurnal day and night cycle. Endogenous GA20 was higher in petiole and leaf compared with stem, whereas there were no differences of GA1, GA9, and GA19 between plant parts. No clear relationship was found between elongation of internodes and petioles and levels of endogenous GAs. Received December 26 1996; accepted July 1, 1997  相似文献   

12.
The aim of this study was to investigate the role of plant hormones, particularly the gibberellins (GAs), in the thermoperiodic regulation of stem elongation in the short day plant (SDP) Begonia x hiemalis. Effects of GAs and some GA precursors were tested on plants grown under alternating day/night temperatures (DT/NT; 12/12 h), and the effects of these temperature regimes on endogenous plant hormones were analyzed using combined gas chromatography and mass spectrometry (GC-MS).Compared with constant temperatures (19/19 °C; 21/21 °C), stem elongation was significantly inhibited by low DT/high NT (14/24 °C; 18/24 °C) and enhanced by the opposite treatments (24/14 °C; 26/17 °C). GA1 stimulated elongation of internodes and petioles while ent-kaurene, kaurenoic acid, GA12, GA19, GA20 had no significant effect. The effect of GA1 was enhanced by a simultaneous application of calcium 3,5-dioxo-4-propionylcyclohexanecarboxylate (BX-112). BX-112 inhibited internode elongation at high DT/low NT (24/14 °C) but not at the reverse temperature regime.Gibberellins A53, A19, A20, A1, A4, A9, and indoleacetic acid (IAA), were identified by GC-MS from both leaves, including the petioles, and stems of B. x hiemalis. There were no apparent relationships between elongation of internodes and petioles and endogenous contents of gibberellins A53, A19, A20, and A1. Recoveries of deuterated GA4 and GA9 were generally too low for estimation of endogenous levels of these GAs.Constant temperature resulted in more open flowers and flower buds compared to alternating DT and NT. BX-112 decreased the time to anthesis.  相似文献   

13.
Karr , E. J. (Ohio State U., Columbus), A. J. Linck , and C. A. Swanson . The effect of short periods of high temperature during day and night periods on pea yields. Amer. Jour. Bot. 46(2) : 91-93. Illus. 1959.—The effect of high temperatures during periods of relatively short duration (3-4 days) at various stages following anthesis at the first bloom node was studied in relation to yield of peas at this node. Except for the periods of differential temperature treatments, the plants were maintained in a standard environment room (24°C., light, 12 hr.; 15°C., darkness, 12 hr.). Three different temperature regimes during the treatment periods were studied: high day temperature—standard night temperature (32°—15°C.) ; standard day temperature—high night temperature (24°—30°C.) ; and high day and night temperatures combined (32°—30°C.). The data reveal the existence of a relatively well-defined thermal-sensitive period, with maximal sensitivity to high day temperatures occurring at about 9-11 days from full bloom, and maximal sensitivity to high night temperatures occurring about 6-9 days from full bloom. High night temperatures proved more critical, resulting in a maximal reduction of 25% in yield, as opposed to about 8% for high day temperatures. The effect of high day and night temperatures combined tended to be roughly additive.  相似文献   

14.
Air temperatures have risen over the past 50 yr along the Antarctic Peninsula, and it is unclear what impact this is having on Antarctic plants. We examined the growth response of the Antarctic vascular plants Colobanthus quitensis (Caryophyllaceae) and Deschampsia antarctica (Poaceae) to temperature and also assessed their ability for thermal acclimation, in terms of whole-canopy net photosynthesis (P(n)) and dark respiration (R(d)), by growing plants for 90 d under three contrasting temperature regimes: 7°C day/7°C night, 12°C day/7°C night, and 20°C day/7°C night (18 h/6 h). These daytime temperatures represent suboptimal (7°C), near-optimal (12°C), and supraoptimal (20°C) temperatures for P(n) based on field measurements at the collection site near Palmer Station along the west coast of the Antarctic Peninsula. Plants of both species grown at a daytime temperature of 20°C had greater RGR (relative growth rate) and produced 2.2-3.3 times as much total biomass as plants grown at daytime temperatures of 12° or 7°C. Plants grown at 20°C also produced 2.0-4.1 times as many leaves, 3.4-5.5 times as much total leaf area, and had 1.5-1.6 times the LAR (leaf area ratio; leaf area:total biomass) and 1.1-1.4 times the LMR (leaf mass ratio; leaf mass:total biomass) of plants grown at 12° or 7°C. Greater RGR and biomass production at 20°C appeared primarily due to greater biomass allocation to leaf production in these plants. Rates of P(n) (leaf-area basis), when measured at their respective daytime growth temperatures, were highest in plants grown at 12°C, and rates of plants grown at 20°C were only 58 (C. quitensis) or 64% (D. antarctica) of the rates in plants grown at 12°C. Thus, lower P(n) per leaf area in plants grown at 20°C was more than offset by much greater leaf-area production. Rates of whole-canopy P(n) (per plant), when measured at their respective daytime growth temperatures, were highest in plants grown at 20°C, and appeared well correlated with differences in RGR and total biomass among treatments. Colobanthus quitensis exhibited only a slight ability for relative acclimation of P(n) (leaf-area basis) as the optimal temperature for P(n) increased from 8.4° to 10.3° to 11.5°C as daytime growth temperatures increased from 7° to 12° to 20°C. There was no evidence for relative acclimation of P(n) in D. antarctica, as plants grown at all three temperature regimes had a similar optimal temperature (10°C) for P(n). There was no evidence for absolute acclimation of P(n) in either species, as rates of P(n) in plants grown at a daytime temperature of 12°C were higher than those of plants grown at daytime temperatures of 7° or 20°C, when measured at their respective growth temperatures. The poor ability for photosynthetic acclimation in these species may be associated with the relatively stable maritime temperature regime during the growing season along the Peninsula. In contrast to P(n), both species exhibited full acclimation of R(d), and rates of R(d) on a leaf-area basis were similar among treatments when measured at their respective daytime growth temperature. Our results suggest that in the absence of interspecific competition, continued warming along the Peninsula will lead to improved vegetative growth of these species due to (1) greater biomass allocation to leaf-area production (as opposed to improved rates of P(n) per leaf area) and (2) their ability to acclimate R(d), such that respiratory losses per leaf area do not increase under higher temperature regimes.  相似文献   

15.
Rapacz M 《Annals of botany》2002,89(5):543-549
The aim of this work was to establish the role of factors that may trigger elongation growth in the dehardening response, namely temperature during daylight, photoperiod and vernalization. Fully cold-acclimated seedlings of winter (with incomplete vernalization) and spring oilseed rape were subjected to deacclimation under temperatures of 2/12, 12/2, 12/12, 12/20, 20/12 and 20/20 degrees C (day/night) and a 12 h photoperiod. Plants were also deacclimated under photoperiods of 8 and 16 h at constant temperatures of 12 and 20 degrees C. After deacclimation, plants were subjected to reacclimation. Results suggest that the level of growth activity induced during deacclimation affects both the deacclimation rate and the capacity for reacclimation. Deacclimation is fully reversible if it is not accompanied by induction of elongation growth. In such cases the rate of the decrease in freezing tolerance depends on the mean temperature of deacclimation. Deacclimation becomes partially or completely irreversible when it is connected with promotion of elongation growth. The stimuli triggering elongation growth during deacclimation may be the growth-promoting temperature (20 degrees C) during the day and the lack of vernalization blockage of elongation growth. When elongation growth was stimulated by other factors such as long-day treatments, rehardening was also disturbed.  相似文献   

16.
In controlled temperature glasshouses plant morphology, gramdevelopment and yield of pearl millet (Pennisetum americanum)were markedly affected by temperature during three stages ofplant growth: vegetative, stem elongation, and grain development.High temperature (to 33/28 °C day/night) during all threegrowth stages lowered grain yields by reducing basal tillering,numbers of grains per inflorescence, and single grain weight.Low temperature (21/16 °C) during the vegetative stage increasedbasal tillering and, as a result, total grain yield per plant.However, low temperature during the stem elongation stage reducedspikelet fertility and influorescence length, and thereby reducedthe potential main shoot grain yield. Low temperature duringgrain development increased the grain filling period and grainyield. The rate of grain filling did not vary over the rangeof 21/16 to 33/28 °C. Although plant morphology and grainyield were markedly affected by pre-anthesis thermal environment,grain development was not. At all temperatures ethanol-solublecarbohydrates stored in the stem were depleted during earlygrain development.  相似文献   

17.
Two experiments were done in Saxcil growth cabinets in order to investigate the effects of climatic factors and nitrogen nutrition on the growth, reproductive development and seed yield of soyabean cv. TK5. In the first, plants were grown to maturity in eight environments comprising all combinations of two short daylengths (11 h 40 min and 13 h 20 min), two day (27 and 33oC) and two night (19 and 24oC) temperatures. In the second, day temperature was kept at 33oC but the night temperature was varied (19 and 24oC) as was the mineral nitrogen supply (20 and 197 ppm N) to plants which were either inoculated or not with an effective single strain of Rhizobium. Taller, more branched, later flowering plants were produced in the longer daylength but seed yield was hardly affected because the components of yield did not all respond similarly. In the higher day temperature treatments seed yield per plant was reduced by half because all yield components were adversely affected - pods per plant by 34 %, mean seed dry weight by 24 % and seeds per pod just slightly. There was a marked effect of the higher night temperature which promoted early vegetative growth, induced early flowering and although the number of pods per plant was, overall, reduced by 48 %, seed yield per plant was little affected as mean seed dry weight was increased by 37 % and the number of seeds per pod was also increased slightly. Prior to flowering, nodulated plants obtained about two thirds of their total nitrogen requirement via direct uptake and one third through the symbiotic system. Vegetative dry weight and plant nitrogen content were increased by the higher mineral nitrogen level and, although height was slightly diminished, more branches were produced. Seed yield, however, was only slightly increased. These experiments have shown that night temperature is an environmental factor of major importance for the growth of this soyabean cultivar. They have provided, also, a more rational basis for interpreting seasonal variations in growth and seed yield of soyabean in the tropics where, clearly, day and night temperature effects can override those of daylength and nitrogen nutrition.  相似文献   

18.
Net photosynthetic rates and mesophyll conductances were measured under standardized conditions for leaves of two C3 and one C4 annual species grown at temperatures of 20 to 32°C. Plants were grown with varying day and night temperatures, and also at constant temperatures equal to all the day and night temperatures used. Plants were grown with 8, 12, and 16 hours of light per day. This design allowed determination of whether photosynthetic characteristics were best correlated with day, night, mean, or time-weighted mean temperatures, The results showed that for Glycine max (L.) Merr. (C3) night temperature was most important in determining photosynthetic characteristics, while in Helianthus annuus L. (C3) and Amaranthus hypochondriacus L. (C4) the time-weighted mean temperature was most important. The results for all species were consistent with the hypothesis that development of photosynthetic characteristics is related to a balance between the rate of leaf expansion and the rate of photosynthesis under the growth conditions.  相似文献   

19.
Phytochrome control of short-day-induced bud set in black cottonwood   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
In trees and other woody perennial plants, short days (SDs) typically induce growth cessation, the initiation of cold acclimation, the formation of a terminal bud and bud dormancy. Phytochrome control of SD-induced bud set was investigated in two northern clones of black cottonwood (Populus trichocarpa Torr. & Gray) by using night breaks with red light (R) and far-red light (FR). For both clones (BC-1 and BC-2), SD-induced bud set was prevented when R night breaks as short as 2 min were given in the middle of the night. When night breaks with 2 min of R were immediately followed by 2 min of FR, substantial reversibility of bud set was observed for BC-1 but not for BC-2. By comparing the effects of the R night breaks on bud set and the length of specific internodes, we determined that the R night breaks influenced internode elongation in two opposing ways. First, the addition of a R night break to the SD treatment prevented the cessation of internode elongation that is associated with bud set. Those internodes that would not have elongated under SDs (and would have been found within the terminal bud) elongated in the R treatment. Second, the R night breaks decreased internode length relative to the long-day (LD) control. In contrast to the clonal differences in reversibility that we observed for bud set, the decrease in internode length (i.e. the second effect of R) was R/FR reversible in both clones. Based on these results, we conclude that internode elongation is influenced by two distinct types of phytochrome-mediated response. The first response is a typical response to photpperiod, whereas the second response is a typical “end-of-day” response to light quality. Our results demonstrate that SD-induced bud set in black cottonwood is controlled by phytochrome but that clonal differences have an important influence on the R/FR reversibility of this response. The availability of an experimental system in which SD-induced bud set is R/FR reversible will be valuable for studying the physiological genetics of photoperiodism in trees.  相似文献   

20.
Gibberellin (GA) is believed to be involved in thermoperiodic stem elongation. With this in mind, we studied the correlation between gibberellin A1 (GA1) levels and stem elongation affected by alternating day (DT) and night temperature (NT) in 5 genotypes of Pisum sativum differing in their degree of dwarfism. The endogenous GA content in the tissue of two of the genotypes was determined by combined gas chromatography and mass spectrometry. The wild genotype developed 40 to 50% shorter stems and internodes under a low DT and high NT combination (negative difference [DIF] between DT and NT, DT/NT 15.5/21.5 or 14/24°C) than under the opposite regime of high DT and low NT (positive DIF, DT/NT 22.5/16.5 or 24/14°C). The GA biosynthetic mutants ls and le, and the auxin and brassinosteroid mutant lkb responded in a similar way, but not as strongly as the wild type. The stem length of the GA-insensitive slender mutant (la crys) was reduced by only 8% under negative compared to positive DIF. In the wild type endogenous GA levels decreased by 60% from positive to negative DIF in the upper part of the stem. Further, there was a corresponding decrease in the levels of precursors to GA1, i.e. GA53, GA44, GA19 and GA20, while 2β-hydroxylated GA20 and GA1, GA29 and GA8, respectively, were unaffected by DIF. A similar increase in the ratios of GA29 to GA20 and GA8 to GA1 from positive to negative DIF was seen in the stem tissue of the le mutant as in the wild type. The temperature regimes affected the levels of GA1 and its precursors in combined leaf and petiole samples and in the shoot tip in a similar manner as in the stem tissue. However, the different temperature regimes did not affect the ratio of GA8/GA1 in the shoot tip. The results indicate that altered stem elongation of the pea plants in response to diurnal temperature alternations may be mediated by changes in endogenous levels of GA1. The GA1 levels may be controlled by an effect of DIF on both biosynthetic and inactivation steps.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号