Flowering regulation in the facultative biennial Oenothera biennis L. environmental effects and their relation to growth rate

The lifecycle of the facultative biennial oilseed-crop evening primrose [Oenothera biennis] is a major constraint for its commercial production under different growing conditions, as a variable proportion of plants fails to flower during the first season and remains as vegetative rosettes [biennial behavior]. The aim of this work was to understand how flowering is regulated in this species and to identify the main determinants of its biennial behavior.Different planting dates and manipulative treatments [seed vernalization, photoperiod extension and fertilization] were employed to analyze if: [i] biennial behavior occurs when obligate requirements for vernalization or photoperiod are not satisfied; and [ii] responses to these environmental cues depend on the size and/or growth rate of rosettes.Our results indicate that O. biennis has an obligate long-day requirement for flowering and a facultative vernalization response. There is no minimum size requirement for vernalization response [as very small seedlings responded to the vernalization treatment] and the rate of development toward flowering under inductive photoperiods was strongly affected by rosette's growth rate. The incidence of high temperatures just before the onset of reproduction is proposed as an inhibitory factor that prevents reproduction under otherwise photo-inductive conditions. This last factor would explain the high incidence of biennial behavior frequently observed in spring/summer sowing in this crop.

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Main Authors: Giménez, R., Sorlino, Daniel Marcelo, Bertero, Héctor Daniel, Ploschuk, Edmundo Leonardo
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:FLOWERING, GROWTH RATE, HIGH TEMPERATURE, OENOTHERA BIENNIS, PHOTOPERIOD, VERNALIZATION, CROPS, ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS, SEED, PLANTS [BOTANY], ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECT, FERTILIZATION [REPRODUCTION],
Online Access:http://ceiba.agro.uba.ar/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=46991
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spelling KOHA-OAI-AGRO:469912023-03-29T12:58:46Zhttp://ceiba.agro.uba.ar/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=46991AAGFlowering regulation in the facultative biennial Oenothera biennis L. environmental effects and their relation to growth rateGiménez, R.Sorlino, Daniel MarceloBertero, Héctor DanielPloschuk, Edmundo Leonardotextengapplication/pdfThe lifecycle of the facultative biennial oilseed-crop evening primrose [Oenothera biennis] is a major constraint for its commercial production under different growing conditions, as a variable proportion of plants fails to flower during the first season and remains as vegetative rosettes [biennial behavior]. The aim of this work was to understand how flowering is regulated in this species and to identify the main determinants of its biennial behavior.Different planting dates and manipulative treatments [seed vernalization, photoperiod extension and fertilization] were employed to analyze if: [i] biennial behavior occurs when obligate requirements for vernalization or photoperiod are not satisfied; and [ii] responses to these environmental cues depend on the size and/or growth rate of rosettes.Our results indicate that O. biennis has an obligate long-day requirement for flowering and a facultative vernalization response. There is no minimum size requirement for vernalization response [as very small seedlings responded to the vernalization treatment] and the rate of development toward flowering under inductive photoperiods was strongly affected by rosette's growth rate. The incidence of high temperatures just before the onset of reproduction is proposed as an inhibitory factor that prevents reproduction under otherwise photo-inductive conditions. This last factor would explain the high incidence of biennial behavior frequently observed in spring/summer sowing in this crop.The lifecycle of the facultative biennial oilseed-crop evening primrose [Oenothera biennis] is a major constraint for its commercial production under different growing conditions, as a variable proportion of plants fails to flower during the first season and remains as vegetative rosettes [biennial behavior]. The aim of this work was to understand how flowering is regulated in this species and to identify the main determinants of its biennial behavior.Different planting dates and manipulative treatments [seed vernalization, photoperiod extension and fertilization] were employed to analyze if: [i] biennial behavior occurs when obligate requirements for vernalization or photoperiod are not satisfied; and [ii] responses to these environmental cues depend on the size and/or growth rate of rosettes.Our results indicate that O. biennis has an obligate long-day requirement for flowering and a facultative vernalization response. There is no minimum size requirement for vernalization response [as very small seedlings responded to the vernalization treatment] and the rate of development toward flowering under inductive photoperiods was strongly affected by rosette's growth rate. The incidence of high temperatures just before the onset of reproduction is proposed as an inhibitory factor that prevents reproduction under otherwise photo-inductive conditions. This last factor would explain the high incidence of biennial behavior frequently observed in spring/summer sowing in this crop.FLOWERINGGROWTH RATEHIGH TEMPERATUREOENOTHERA BIENNISPHOTOPERIODVERNALIZATIONCROPSENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONSSEEDPLANTS [BOTANY]ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTFERTILIZATION [REPRODUCTION]Industrial Crops and Products
institution UBA FA
collection Koha
country Argentina
countrycode AR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ceiba
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca Central FAUBA
language eng
topic FLOWERING
GROWTH RATE
HIGH TEMPERATURE
OENOTHERA BIENNIS
PHOTOPERIOD
VERNALIZATION
CROPS
ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS
SEED
PLANTS [BOTANY]
ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECT
FERTILIZATION [REPRODUCTION]
FLOWERING
GROWTH RATE
HIGH TEMPERATURE
OENOTHERA BIENNIS
PHOTOPERIOD
VERNALIZATION
CROPS
ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS
SEED
PLANTS [BOTANY]
ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECT
FERTILIZATION [REPRODUCTION]
spellingShingle FLOWERING
GROWTH RATE
HIGH TEMPERATURE
OENOTHERA BIENNIS
PHOTOPERIOD
VERNALIZATION
CROPS
ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS
SEED
PLANTS [BOTANY]
ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECT
FERTILIZATION [REPRODUCTION]
FLOWERING
GROWTH RATE
HIGH TEMPERATURE
OENOTHERA BIENNIS
PHOTOPERIOD
VERNALIZATION
CROPS
ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS
SEED
PLANTS [BOTANY]
ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECT
FERTILIZATION [REPRODUCTION]
Giménez, R.
Sorlino, Daniel Marcelo
Bertero, Héctor Daniel
Ploschuk, Edmundo Leonardo
Flowering regulation in the facultative biennial Oenothera biennis L. environmental effects and their relation to growth rate
description The lifecycle of the facultative biennial oilseed-crop evening primrose [Oenothera biennis] is a major constraint for its commercial production under different growing conditions, as a variable proportion of plants fails to flower during the first season and remains as vegetative rosettes [biennial behavior]. The aim of this work was to understand how flowering is regulated in this species and to identify the main determinants of its biennial behavior.Different planting dates and manipulative treatments [seed vernalization, photoperiod extension and fertilization] were employed to analyze if: [i] biennial behavior occurs when obligate requirements for vernalization or photoperiod are not satisfied; and [ii] responses to these environmental cues depend on the size and/or growth rate of rosettes.Our results indicate that O. biennis has an obligate long-day requirement for flowering and a facultative vernalization response. There is no minimum size requirement for vernalization response [as very small seedlings responded to the vernalization treatment] and the rate of development toward flowering under inductive photoperiods was strongly affected by rosette's growth rate. The incidence of high temperatures just before the onset of reproduction is proposed as an inhibitory factor that prevents reproduction under otherwise photo-inductive conditions. This last factor would explain the high incidence of biennial behavior frequently observed in spring/summer sowing in this crop.
format Texto
topic_facet FLOWERING
GROWTH RATE
HIGH TEMPERATURE
OENOTHERA BIENNIS
PHOTOPERIOD
VERNALIZATION
CROPS
ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS
SEED
PLANTS [BOTANY]
ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECT
FERTILIZATION [REPRODUCTION]
author Giménez, R.
Sorlino, Daniel Marcelo
Bertero, Héctor Daniel
Ploschuk, Edmundo Leonardo
author_facet Giménez, R.
Sorlino, Daniel Marcelo
Bertero, Héctor Daniel
Ploschuk, Edmundo Leonardo
author_sort Giménez, R.
title Flowering regulation in the facultative biennial Oenothera biennis L. environmental effects and their relation to growth rate
title_short Flowering regulation in the facultative biennial Oenothera biennis L. environmental effects and their relation to growth rate
title_full Flowering regulation in the facultative biennial Oenothera biennis L. environmental effects and their relation to growth rate
title_fullStr Flowering regulation in the facultative biennial Oenothera biennis L. environmental effects and their relation to growth rate
title_full_unstemmed Flowering regulation in the facultative biennial Oenothera biennis L. environmental effects and their relation to growth rate
title_sort flowering regulation in the facultative biennial oenothera biennis l. environmental effects and their relation to growth rate
url http://ceiba.agro.uba.ar/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=46991
work_keys_str_mv AT gimenezr floweringregulationinthefacultativebiennialoenotherabiennislenvironmentaleffectsandtheirrelationtogrowthrate
AT sorlinodanielmarcelo floweringregulationinthefacultativebiennialoenotherabiennislenvironmentaleffectsandtheirrelationtogrowthrate
AT berterohectordaniel floweringregulationinthefacultativebiennialoenotherabiennislenvironmentaleffectsandtheirrelationtogrowthrate
AT ploschukedmundoleonardo floweringregulationinthefacultativebiennialoenotherabiennislenvironmentaleffectsandtheirrelationtogrowthrate
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