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Effects of induction treatments on flowering in Populus deltoides.

Abstract
Stimulation of early flowering is required to shorten breeding cycles of eastern cottonwood (Populus deltoides Bartr. ex Marsh. var. deltoides), a commercially important and fast-growing hardwood species. A series of experiments was conducted to evaluate the influence of various treatments on flowering in rooted cuttings from mature and juvenile trees. A combined treatment of water stress, root pruning and paclobutrazol was applied to 3-month-old rooted cuttings from mature trees. These cuttings had been subjected to root restriction and long days. All treated plants flowered, whereas no untreated plants formed flower buds. One-year-old rooted cuttings from juvenile trees did not flower when treated with either paclobutrazol, paclobutrazol plus water stress, paclobutrazol plus root pruning, or paclobutrazol plus girdling. This was true both under continuous or periodic growth. Assessment of the lack of flowering in juvenile trees may require an integrated approach that investigates environmental or physiological stimuli, assimilate shift, gibberellic acid type and concentration, and flowering-time gene activity in the new shoots of mature and juvenile cottonwood trees.
AuthorsCetin Yuceer, Mark E Kubiske, Richard L Harkess, Samuel B Land Jr
JournalTree physiology (Tree Physiol) Vol. 23 Issue 7 Pg. 489-95 (May 2003) ISSN: 0829-318X [Print] Canada
PMID12670803 (Publication Type: Journal Article)
Chemical References
  • Plant Growth Regulators
  • Triazoles
  • paclobutrazol
Topics
  • Dehydration (physiopathology)
  • Flowers (physiology)
  • Plant Growth Regulators (pharmacology)
  • Plant Roots (physiology)
  • Populus (physiology)
  • Time Factors
  • Trees (physiology)
  • Triazoles (pharmacology)

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