4.7 Article

The number of leaves required for floral induction and translocation of the florigenic promoter in mango (Mangifera indica L.) in a tropical climate

Journal

SCIENTIA HORTICULTURAE
Volume 123, Issue 4, Pages 443-453

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.scienta.2009.10.005

Keywords

Flowering; Age of last flush; Tropical fruit; Colombia; Florigen; Anacardiaceae

Categories

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Mango flowering appears to be determined by a temperature-regulated florigenic promoter (FP) synthesized in leaves and translocated to buds in phloem. The number of leaves required for flowering was investigated in 'Keitt' and 'Tommy Atkins' mango trees exposed to tropical conditions in Colombia. Data were compared with a previous study conducted under cool, floral-inductive conditions in Florida (Davenport et al, 2006). Leaf-number treatments consisted of 0, 1/8, 1/4, 1/2, 1, 2, 3, or 4 leaves on each of 20-40 stems per branch. The long distance translocation experiment consisted of a terminal donor stem and five defoliated receiver stems on each treatment branch. Treatments were 0, 1, 3, or 5 leaves on the donor stem. Every treatment branch in both experiments was girdled to isolate it from the rest of the tree, and developing panicles were removed to stimulate lateral shoot initiation at a time when conditions were right for floral induction in those buds. Treatment stems hearing no leaves produced only vegetative shoots in both cultivars in both experiments. The minimum number of leaves per stem (1/8 of a leaf and 1/4 of a leaf) was sufficient to induce 6% and 1% reproductive shoots with 94% and 99% vegetative shoots in Tommy Atkins' and 'Keitt' stems, respectively. Branches bearing 4 leaves per stem in 'Tommy Atkins' trees produced the maximum mean flowering response with 45% reproductive Shoots and 55% vegetative shoots. The maximum 'Keitt' response was 22% reproductive and 78% vegetative shoots with 4 leaves per stem. The donor stein of the 1-leaf treatment and the donor and first receiver stem of the 3-leaf treatment in the translocation experiment were induced to flower in 'Tommy Atkins' trees. The more distal receiver stems from the donor were vegetative. The 5-leaf donor treatment-induced reproductive shoots as far as the third leafless receiver stem located 52 cm from the donor. Proportions of flowering shoots decreased with distance from the donor, and the level of the FP was apparently insufficient to reach the fourth and fifth receivers since their shoot responses were vegetative. Only vegetative shoot responses were obtained in the translocation experiment conducted in 'Keitt' trees. The leaf number and translocation experiment results support the hypothesis that far less FP is synthesized in both 'Tommy Atkins' and 'Keitt' leaves during warm, tropical conditions than is synthesized in 'Keitt' leaves exposed to cool, subtropical conditions. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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