The Role of Ethylene and Pollination in Petal Senescence and Ovary Growth of Brodiaea

  • Han S
  • Halevy A
  • Reid M
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Abstract

Unpollinated brodiaea (Triteleia laxa Benth.; syn. Brodiaea laxa) flowers produced no measurable C 2 H 4 during their entire lives. Treatment with C 2 H 4 (0.03 μl·liter -1 ) induced senescence of open flowers, completely inhibited opening of buds and petal growth, and promoted ovary growth. Silver thiosulfate had no effect on flowers kept in air but counteracted the effects of applied C, H.. The effect of C 2 H 4 on ovary growth seems to be indirect, via promotion of petal senescence and mobilization of the petal's metabolites to the ovary. Brodiaea flowers are protandrous; the stigma appears to be receptive (as judged by a pollination-induced burst of ethylene synthesis) only when the petals start to senesce. At this stage, papillae on the stigma surface elongated and separated.

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Han, S. S., Halevy, A. H., & Reid, M. S. (2019). The Role of Ethylene and Pollination in Petal Senescence and Ovary Growth of Brodiaea. Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science, 116(1), 68–72. https://doi.org/10.21273/jashs.116.1.68

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