Abstract
Effects of pretreatment, growing temperature and day length on dormancy of strawberry plants were investigated. 'Hoko-wase' strawberry plants were pretreated with various day lengths in the glasshouse (minimum night temperature, 20�C) from October 21, 1981 to March 3, 1982. As the pretreatment, twenty plants each were grown under short day (natural day length), long day (16 hours) and long day+GA, respectively. Four plants were chosen from each pretreatment plot and transferred to the phytotron on March 3. Twelve plants each were cultivated at 15, 20 and 25�C in the phytotron under natural day length until September 22. Results were as follows.1. In the case of the higher growing temperature (25�>20�>15�C), dormancy was induced earlier and was also broken earlier in the short day pretreatment than in the long day and the long day+GA pretreatments.2. Judging from the elongation of petioles, we observed that the higher the growing temperature (25�>20�>15�C), the weaker the degree of dormancy becomes.3. In the case of the higher growing temperature (25�>20�>15�C), the elongation of petioles was observed even under the shorter day length condition and accordingly dormancy was broken a little earlier than expected.4. From these results, it is deduced that the lower the growing temperatures of 15, 20 and 25�C, the larger is the inductive effect toward dormancy. Furthermore, at the same growing temperature, short day has an inductive effect toward dormancy and long day has a breaking effect on dormancy.
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CITATION STYLE
FUJIME, Y., & YAMASAKI, N. (1988). Effects of Pretreatment, Day Length and Temperature on Induction and Breaking of Dormancy in Strawberry Plants. Journal of the Japanese Society for Horticultural Science, 56(4), 444–451. https://doi.org/10.2503/jjshs.56.444
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