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The Journal of Horticultural Science & Biotechnology
Vol. 72 No: 1
Title: Manipulation of Flowering in Cineraria. I. Effects Of Photoperiod
Authors: D.M. YEH and J.G. ATHERTON
pp: 43-54
Abstract:
Effects of photoperiod on flowering, measured as days to macroscopic flower visibility and as leaf number below the terminal inflorescence, were studied in three cultivars of cineraria, Cindy Blue, Cindy Pink and Cindy Dark Red. Short photoperiods accelerated, and long photoperiods delayed, but did not prevent, flower initiation in plants grown under commercial temperature regimes (8–14°C) in glasshouse conditions. The critical photoperiod for flower initiation was 12 h, at and below which plants produced the fewest leaves below the flowers. In cvs Cindy Blue and Cindy Pink, the ceiling photoperiod was 16 h, at and above which plants produced their maximum final leaf number. The rates of progress to flower initiation and to flower visibility were shown to be faster in plants grown under 8–12 h photoperiods and both rates decreased approximately linearly as photoperiod increased from 12 to 16 h in cvs Cindy Blue and Cindy Pink. There was no "minimum number" of short-day cycles required for flower initiation. However, a minimum of 15 short-day cycles was found to accelerate flower
initiation in cv. Cindy Dark Red and 20 in cv. Cindy Blue. The axillary flowering node was lower with short photoperiod treatments and the number of axillary flowering branches was also increased.
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