Abstract
Barley plants were grown at a mean diurnal temperature of 15 °C and reciprocally transferred between different photoperiods (from 16 h d-1 to 8, 10 or 13 h d-1 or vice versa at 4, 8, 16 or 32 d after germination). Ten contrasting genotypes were examined, including seven spring-sown types-Mona, BGS T16-2, Athenais, Emir, Funza, USDA-016525 and S-37, and three autumn-sown types-Gerbel B, Arabi Abiad and Ager. In the latter two all treatments were repeated on plants grown from seeds which had been vernalized at 2 °C for 42 d.The results suggest that, between the critical photoperiod (below which there is a delay in flowering) and the ceiling photoperiod (below which there is no further delay), there is a linear relation between photoperiod and the reciprocal of the time taken to flower (awn emergence). In all genotypes the ceiling photoperiod was ≲, 10 hdd-1; the critical photoperiod was always > 13 hdd-1 often > 14 hdd-1, and sometimes > 16 hdd-1.All genotypes were initially insensitive to long days. At 15 °C this pre-inductive phase typically lasted for 8-10 d after germination in spring-sown types and in vernalized autumn-sown types, but continued for more than 32 d in non-vernalized autumn-sown types. It was followed by an inductive phase, the duration of which depended on photoperiod, being longer in shorter days. Finally, there was a photoperiod-insensitive, post-inductive phase, which probably began about 2 weeks before awn emergence.The low-temperature seed-vernalization treatment considerably hastened awn emergence in Arabi Abiad and in Ager; in Arabi Abiad low-temperature vernalization could be partly replaced by treating young plants with short days (8 or 10 h dd-1). Both low-temperature and short-day vernalization advanced flowering by advancing ear initiation (reducing the duration of the pre-inductive phase), whereas long days stimulated the rate of development following ear initiation. © 1988 Annals of Botany Company.
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Roberts, E. H., Summerfield, R. J., Cooper, J. P., & Ellis, R. H. (1988). Environmental control of flowering in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.). I. Photoperiod limits to long-day responses, photoperiod-insensitive phases and effects of low-temperature and short-day vernalization. Annals of Botany, 62(2), 127–144. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.aob.a087644
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