4.7 Article

Use of a cyclic high-pressure sodium lamp to inhibit flowering of chrysanthemum and velvet sage

Journal

SCIENTIA HORTICULTURAE
Volume 122, Issue 3, Pages 448-454

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scienta.2009.06.016

Keywords

Chrysanthemum x grandiflorum; Incandescent lamp; Mexican bush sage; Night interruption; Photoperiodic lighting; Salvia leucantha; Short day

Categories

Funding

  1. Michigan's plant agriculture initiative at Michigan State University (Project GREEEN)

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Photoperiod is commonly controlled in the commercial production of ornamental crops to induce or prevent flowering. Flower induction in short-day (SD) plants can be prevented or delayed when the natural daylength is short by providing low-intensity lighting during the dark period. A stationary high-pressure sodium (HPS) lamp with an oscillating aluminum parabolic reflector (cyclic HPS) has been developed to provide intermittent lighting to greenhouse crops. We determined the efficacy of a cyclic HPS lamp at preventing flowering in SD plants garden chrysanthemum [Chrysanthemum x grandiflorum (Ramat.) Kitam.] 'Bianca', pot chrysanthemum 'Auburn', and velvet sage (Salvia leucantha L) relative to traditional night interruption (NI) lighting strategies. Plants were grown in a glass-glazed greenhouse at a mean daily temperature of 19.5-20.7 degrees C with natural SD photoperiods. NI lighting was delivered during the middle of the night (2230-0230 h) from a 600 W cyclic HPS lamp mounted at one gable end of the greenhouse or from incandescent (INC) lamps that were illuminated for the entire 4 h (CONT INC) or for 6 min every 30 min for 4 h. Plants under cyclic HPS were grown at lateral distances of 1, 4, 7, 10, or 13 m from under the lamp. Control plants were grown under an uninterrupted 15 h skotoperiod. As the distance from the cyclic HPS lamp increased from 1 to 13 m, the maximum irradiance measured during the NI decreased from 25.4 to 0.3 mu ml m(-2) s(-1) and time to visible inflorescence (VI) and the number of nodes at VI decreased. All species had a VI within 54 d, but <= 10% of plants flowered when grown at a lateral distance of I or 4 m from the cyclic HPS lamp or under CONT INC. Plants grown without NI had a VI 2 to 15 d earlier and flowered 7 to 24 d earlier than plants grown at 10 or 13 m from the cyclic HPS. All garden chrysanthemums flowered under cyclic INC, whereas velvet sage and pot chrysanthemum had 15% and 35% flowering, respectively. These results indicate that a cyclic HPS lamp can be used effectively to delay flower induction and prevent flowering in these species when NI is delivered at >= 2.4 mu mol m(-2) s(-1). (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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