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The inhibition of potato sprout growth by light.
Authors:E. McGEE  R. H. BOOTH   M. C. JARVIS  H. J. DUNCAN
Affiliation:Agricultural Chemistry Department, Glasgow University, Glasgow G12 8QQ Scotland UK;*Postharvest Technology, The International Potato Centre, P. 0. Box 5969, Lima, Peru
Abstract:When potato seed tubers (Solanum tuberosum cv. Pentland Javelin) were stored in darkness or diffuse daylight at 9°C and transferred at intervals to conditions suitable for sprouting, their capacity for sprout growth was unaffected by the presence or absence of light during previous storage. When similar tubers were stored at 10°C, 18°C or 25°C, sprout growth commenced earliest at 25°C, but the date was unaffected by fluorescent light. It was concluded that light did not affect the length of the dormant period, but only the rate of sprout elongation after that period had ceased. When tubers with growing sprouts at 10°C or 18°C were transferred from darkness into fluorescent light, sprout growth virtually ceased. Transfer from light into darkness resulted in immediate sprout growth, at a rate comparable with tubers stored continuously in the dark. Tubers of three Peruvian cultivars, stored in farm-scale diffuse-daylight stores, grew progressively shorter sprouts with increasing daily exposure to light from 30 min to 12 h. Storage of cv. Wilja under 21 Wm-2 (total) of white fluorescent light for 10 h per day maintained the sprouts at the same length as ten times this light intensity for 1 h per day. In a subsequent experiment with cv. Bintje the 10 h, low-intensity light regime gave slightly shorter sprouts. It appeared that the total light energy falling on the tubers was the dominant factor controlling sprout growth.
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