4.3 Article

Long-day control of flowering in everbearing strawberries

Journal

JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE & BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 82, Issue 6, Pages 875-884

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14620316.2007.11512321

Keywords

-

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Photoperiod and temperature control of flowering in a number of perpetual-flowering or everbearing strawberry cultivars of widely varying pedigree has been studied in controlled environments. Flower bud initiation in the cultivars 'Flamenco', 'Ridder', 'Rita' and 'Rondo' was significantly advanced by long-day (LD) conditions at temperatures of 15 degrees C and 21 degrees C; while, at 27 degrees C, flowering took place under LD conditions only. Some plants of the seed-propagated F-1-hybrid 'Elan', raised at 21 degrees C, also flowered under short-day (SD) conditions at 27 degrees C, but reverted to the vegetative state after a few weeks when maintained under these conditions. When vegetative plants growing in SD at 27 degrees C were transferred to LD conditions at the same temperature, they consistently initiated flower buds and started flowering after about 4 weeks. At such a high temperature, flowering could thus be turned on and off by switching between SD and LD conditions. This applied to all the cultivars studied. Also the cultivar 'Everest', which was tested only at 21 degrees C, produced similar results. Night interruption for 2 It was effective in bringing about the LD response. At 9 degrees C, flowering was substantially delayed, especially in 'Flamenco' and, at this temperature, flowering was unaffected by photoperiod. Runner formation was generally promoted by high temperature and SD conditions, but the photoperiodic effect varied between experiments. We conclude that everbearing strawberry cultivars, in general, whether of the older European-type or the modern Californian-type originating from crosses with selections of Fragaria virginiana ssp. glauca, are qualitative (obligatory) LD plants at high temperature (27 degrees C), and quantitative LD plants at intermediate temperatures. Only at temperatures below 10 degrees C are these cultivars day-neutral.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available