The Role of Leaves in the Perception of Vernalizing Temperatures in Sugar Beet |
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Authors: | CROSTHWAITE, SUSAN K. JENKINS, GARETH I. |
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Abstract: | Annual and biennial sugar beet varieties require long days toinduce flowering but the biennial genotypes additionally requirevernalization. Previous research has suggested that the inabilityof non-vernalized biennial plants to flower can be explainedby a lack of competence of the leaves to respond to long days.In this study defoliation experiments were used to investigatewhich leaves could perceive long daylengths and, in particular,whether leaves initiated from a non-vernalized shoot apicalmeristem could perceive vernalizing temperatures and producea floral stimulus in long days. Annual and vernalized biennialplants flowered if young leaves (i.e. those formed during orafter vernalization) were kept on the plants, but they did notflower if only older expanded leaves (including those expandedprior to vernalization) were present. No evidence was obtainedto indicate that the older leaves contained inhibitors of floweringand it seems most likely that there is a decline in responsivenessto daylength with increasing leaf age. Exposure to vernalizingtemperatures accelerated flowering of the annual and was essentialfor flowering of the biennial. The presence of a single leafinitiated, but not expanded, prior to the transfer of biennialplants to vernalizing temperatures was sufficient to induceflowering. This indicates that expanding leaves do not needto be initiated from a vernalized apical meristem to becomecompetent to produce a floral stimulus in long days. Key words: Beta vulgaris L., sugar beet, vernalization, flowering |
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