4.7 Article

Floret development and spike growth as affected by photoperiod during stem elongation in wheat

Journal

FIELD CROPS RESEARCH
Volume 81, Issue 1, Pages 29-38

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0378-4290(02)00196-X

Keywords

photoperiod; vernalization; floret development; spike growth; wheat

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A longer duration of stem elongation (from terminal spikelet initiation to anthesis) would result in a higher wheat yield potential as a consequence of the increase in both spike dry weight and number of fertile florets at anthesis. It is not clearly understood, however, which processes are involved in the increased spike dry weight and whether this variable accounts for the higher number of fertile florets when duration of stem elongation is modified by photoperiod treatments. As vernalization interacts with photoperiod during the stem elongation phase, a better understanding of the role of vernalization is also required. A field experiment was carried out using two wheat cultivars (Buck Manantial (BM) and Eureka Ferrocarril Sur (EFS)) subjected to diverse periods of vernalization (V-15 and V-50, plants vernalized for 15 and 50 days, respectively) and exposed to different photoperiods (NP + 0 and NP + 6, natural and 6 h extended photoperiod, respectively) only during the stem elongation phase. Floret development together with stem and spike growth during the stem elongation phase were studied. When the stem elongation phase was exposed to short photoperiod (i) duration of spike growth increased without any change in its growth rate, and (ii) most of the spike growth occurred during minimum stem growth rate as the onset of maximum stem growth rate was delayed. In EFS, the vernalization-sensitive cultivar, the former (i) and (ii) was true only when vernalization requirements were met. For both cultivars, the survival of the initiated floret primordia under short photoperiod increased, independently of vernalization. Both partitioning of assimilates to the spike and a direct photoperiod effect seemed to have been involved in the survival of floret primordia when the stem elongation phase was exposed to short photoperiod. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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