کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
4570062 | 1331369 | 2006 | 5 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
Floral initiation of a wild strawberry strain, Fragaria chiloensis CHI-24-1, is strongly induced by a 24 h day-length (DL) treatment for 40 days consisting of natural daylight and continuous lighting at night by an incandescent lamp. To use the characteristics of floral initiation in CHI-24-1 as a genetic resource for breeding of cultivated strawberries, the photoperiodic reactions of sexual and asexual reproductive growth under various temperature conditions should be clarified. For that purpose, we examined: (1) floral initiation, inflorescence emergence and runner production seasons of CHI-24-1 plants grown under natural climatic conditions in an open field at the Faculty of Agriculture, Kagawa University and (2) the effects of various DLs and temperatures on floral initiation and runner production of CHI-24-1 plants. When the CHI-24-1 plants were grown under natural conditions, the floral initiation, inflorescence emergence and runner production were observed, respectively, in late autumn, spring, and from spring to autumn. Floral initiation of CHI-24-1 plants was induced strongly by 24 h DL at mean temperatures greater than 20 °C. The maximum floral initiation rates were 90% in the parent plant and 94% in the daughter plants, which were linked by runners to the parent plant. The floral initiation of the daughter plants occurred under 20, 22, and 23 h DL at mean temperatures greater than 20 °C, but not for the parent plants. Floral initiation was induced in 100% of the parent plants by the 8 h DL and the lowest mean-temperature conditions. Results of those experiments indicated that CHI-24-1 was an absolute long day plant having critical DL of about 20 h at mean temperatures greater than 20 °C, even though it was a June-bearing strawberry plant. In addition, CHI-24-1 was a facultative short-day plant at mean temperatures of less than 15 °C.
Journal: Scientia Horticulturae - Volume 110, Issue 2, 9 October 2006, Pages 187–191