Studies in the Physiology of Flowering of Timothy (Phleum pratense L.): IV. Effect of Shoot Age and Nitrogen Level on the Size of the Inflorescence |
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Authors: | RYLE G J A |
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Institution: | The Grassland Research Institute Hurley, Berkshire |
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Abstract: | The main-stem ear lengths of S. 48 timothy plants increasedwith shoot age at the time of flowering, reaching a peak afterthe expansion of 2025 leaves and then declining again:similar responses were also apparent in subsidiary tillers onthe same plants. In natural conditions, the maximum ear lengthswere attained on shoots originating in autumn and early winterand flowering the following summer; shoots arising later developedprogressively shorter ears. It is suggested that the potentialear length attainable on a shoot is linked with the size ofthe shoot apex built up during vegetative development. In early formed tillers, mainly primary and secondary, a reducednitrogen supply decreased the size of ears by limiting spikedifferentiation. The intensity of the nitrogen effect increasedin later generations of tillers, with the result that the influenceof shoot age on ear length became obscured. The results emphasizedthe importance of the internal relations between tillers inperennial plants, especially with regard to mineral nutrition. |
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