GROWTH PATTERNS OF PEA SEEDLINGS IN DARKNESS AND IN RED AND WHITE LIGHT |
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Authors: | Betty F Thomson Pauline Monz Miller |
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Institution: | Department of Botany West Virginia, University Morgantown, West Virginia |
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Abstract: | Thomson , Betty F., and Pauline Monz Miller . (Connecticut Coll., New London.) Growth patterns of pea seedlings in darkness and in red and white light. Amer. Jour. Bot. 48(3): 256–261. Illus. 1961.—Seedlings of peas were grown in vermiculite at 22°C. and exposed 16 hr. daily to red or white light or kept in darkness. Others were grown in soil in the greenhouse. Samples harvested daily to 16 days were dissected, the length of each internode and leaf measured and the total number of leaves and leaf primordia counted. The form of the stem apex and youngest primordia and interrodes is the same in light as in darkness. Leaf production is accelerated very slightly and the growth of leaves and internodes is decidedly accelerated by light. Leaf-leaf, leaf-internode and internode-internode correlations indicate that the morphogenetic effect of light is limited to later stages of organ growth. Dry weight is consumed more rapidly in light than in darkness, probably because of more rapid growth and slightly greater amounts of respiring tissue in light-grown plants. |
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