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Adventitious staminate flower formation in gibberellin treated gynoecious cucumber plants
Authors:Fuchs, Edna   Atsmon, Dan   Halevy, Abraham H.
Affiliation:1 Department of Floriculture, Volcani Center, Agricultural Research Organization Beit Dagan, Israel
2 Department of Plant Genetics, The Weizmann Institute of Science Rehovot, Israel
3 Department of Ornamental Horticulture, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Rehovot, Israel
Abstract:Single gibberellin (A4+7) treatments induced the appearanceof staminate floral buds in several consecutive nodes on themain stem of genetically female cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.).The staminate buds appeared next to pistillate buds which showedvarious degrees of degeneration. Similarly, repeated GA treatmentsinduced the appearance of staminate flowers in otherwise strictlyhermaphrodite plants, next to bisexual flowers. However, thebisexual buds, unlike the pistillate ones, did not show anydeleterious effects of the GA treatment. Therefore, it is inferredthat the hormonally induced staminate buds did not develop bysexual reversion of would-be pistillate or bisexual buds, butrather, represent adventitious buds which, in normally grownfemale or hermaphrodite plants, never develop. It thus seemsthat predetermined pistillate or bisexual buds do not changeinto staminate ones, while change in the reverse direction hasbeen demonstrated in the past (at least for the gynoecious ones). The effectiveness of the GA treatment in the gynoecious plantsshowed an acropetal gradient both within the affected region,as well as along the main stem. Autoradiographic histologicalexaminations showed that the course of development of the inducedstaminate floral bud did not differ from that of normally developingbuds. (Received June 16, 1977; )
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