Photoperiodic effects on vegetative and reproductive growth of Vaccinium darrowi and V. corymbosum Interspecific hybrids

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Abstract

Experiments were conducted with V. darrowi and two cultivars of southern highbush blueberry, 'Sharpblue' and 'Misty,' to test whether V. darrowi and cultivars derived from it are photoperiodic with respect to flower bud initiation. Plants of each cultivar were grown under three different photoperiod treatments [long days (LD) = 16-hour photoperiod; short days (SD) = 8-hour photoperiod; and short days + night interrupt (SD-NI) = 8-hour photoperiod with 1-hour night interrupt] at constant 21°C for 8 weeks. Vegetative growth was greatest in the LD plants of both cultivars. Flower bud initiation occurred only in the SD treatments, and the lack of flower bud initiation in the SD-NI treatment indicates that flower bud initiation is a phytochrome mediated response in Vaccinium. Previously initiated flower buds on the V. darrowi plants developed and bloomed during the LD treatment, but bloom did not occur in the SD and SD-NI treatment plants until after those plants were moved to LD. These data indicate that flower bud initiation in both V. darrowi and southern highbush blueberry is photoperiodically sensitive, and is promoted by short days, while flower bud development is enhanced under long days.

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Spann, T. M., Williamson, J. G., & Darnell, R. L. (2003). Photoperiodic effects on vegetative and reproductive growth of Vaccinium darrowi and V. corymbosum Interspecific hybrids. HortScience, 38(2), 192–195. https://doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.38.2.192

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