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Pre-maturity gradients in shoot size and in number and size of florets for spring barley treated with mepiquat chloride

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

S. R. Waddington
Affiliation:
Department of Agricultural Botany, Plant Science Laboratories, University of Reading, Reading, Berkshire, RG6 2AS
Phyllis Cartwright
Affiliation:
Department of Agricultural Botany, Plant Science Laboratories, University of Reading, Reading, Berkshire, RG6 2AS

Summary

Effects of mepiquat chloride on gradients of shoot growth within spring barley plants (cv. Koru) were determined in two small-scale field experiments. Mepiquat chloride was applied at either the lemma primordium stage or the late carpel primordium stage of spike development in the main shoot. The shoot dry weight, stem length, spike length, number and size of florets and floret developmental score were measured for all shoots, over the period from the lemma primordium stage of main shoot spike development to the late milk stage of grain development.

Lemma primordium mepiquat chloride increased the size and developmental score of later-formed shorter shoots pre-anthesis while delaying the spike development of the main shoot and other longer shoots by up to 4 days. The overall effect was to produce plants with a reduced range of shoot and spike sizes from the end of floret initiation in the main shoot until maturity. In addition, there was a slight increase in the number of shoots per plant in both experiments. Gradients of carpel development and carpel width along the spike were reduced in all treated spikes by the time of floret abortion in the main shoot but the effects were more noticeable in shorter shoots. The number of florets initiated per plant was increased by 21–22%. All shoots contributed to the larger number of florets but again the major additions came from the shorter shoots. The few extra florets initiated in longer shoots were lost during abortion of distal florets while the 2–5 extra florets on shorter shoots were retained to give extra grains at maturity.

Application of mepiquat chloride at the late carpel primordium stage had little effect on gradients of spike size or on number, size and development of florets.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1988

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