The growth and fructan contents of plants of Vernonia herbacea (Vell.) Rusby regenerated from fragments of the underground organ (rhizophore) were analysed during two developmental cycles.
When cultivated away from their natural ecosystem, these plants went through the same phenological phases as those naturally grown in the cerrado. The first aerial shoots started developing from initial fragments before the new underground system, the former acting as the main metabolic sink for the fructan present in the initial fragments. The new rhizophores started to develop by the sixth month, as photosynthates were transformed into fructans. Growth parameters measured reached higher values in the second growth cycle, exhibiting growth curves synchronized with those obtained for fructan contents in the new rhizophores. Fructo-oligosaccharides were available mostly during the period of fast growth of aerial organs whilst the fructo-polysaccharides were reduced. Fructan variation indicates that these compounds are metabolized during development. Additionally, the rapid growth, intense production of rhizophores and high fructan content make Vernonia herbacea a
promising source of fructan for commercial use.