Physiological studies in birch

Author(s):  
K. A. Longman

SynopsisAspects of whole-plant physiology of birch are reviewed, and previously unpublished research is presented. Seasonal cycles of shoot growth and bud dormancy are discussed, with environmental and hormonal factors affecting the rate and duration of shoot extension and leaf production. Also covered are variability in branching patterns, aspects of cambial activity, onset of the reproductive phase, factors affecting flowering and sex ratio, and seed viability and dormancy. Finally, the regenerative capacity of birch is described, and its future roles are mentioned.

Botany ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 87 (1) ◽  
pp. 88-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pedro E. Gundel ◽  
M. Alejandra Martínez-Ghersa ◽  
Lucas A. Garibaldi ◽  
Claudio M. Ghersa

Neotyphodium endophyte fungi are vertically transmitted symbionts of cool-season grasses. The seed phase of the grass’ life cycle appears to be critical for the persistence of the fungus. Endophyte viability decreases faster than seed viability, but little is known of the effects of this endophyte on seed viability. The endophyte could affect seed viability through changes in water content. Here, we assessed the effects of the endophyte on seed viability, the differential survival of endophyte and seed, and the effects of infection on seed water content. Viability of endophyte-infected and noninfected seeds and endophyte were evaluated over a period of 729 d under 12 controlled environmental conditions. Seed viability was reduced by the infection at high temperature and high relative humidity, but not under other conditions. Moreover, endophyte viability decreased faster than seed viability only under high humidity or high temperature. Seed water content was not affected by endophyte presence. The proportion of viable infected seeds was mainly affected by the loss in endophyte viability and secondly by the differential survival of infected and noninfected seeds. Knowledge on the relative importance of these processes is critical to understand the factors affecting the efficiency of endophyte vertical transmission and the frequency of endophyte-infected plants.


1984 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 387 ◽  
Author(s):  
EW Pook

The canopy dynamics of a regenerated 16-year-old stand of pole and sapling E. maculata were studied for 2½ years by repetitive non-destructive measurements in tree crowns accessed from a 20 m high scaffold tower. Average canopy leaf area density over a sample plot of 36 m2 was 0.23 m2 m-3 at a leaf area index of 4.3. Some 75% of leaf area was held in the canopies of overstorey eucalypts above 10 m in height. Average size of leaves increased gradually from top to bottom of tree canopies. Foliage production was usually concentrated in the upper crowns of trees where there was a higher proportion of active shoots, more frequent growth flushes and more rapid turnover of leaves than in lower canopy layers. Leaf area in the upper canopy fluctuated widely but increased in the long term, in mid canopy was more or less maintained and in lowest canopy declined. Crops of developing flower buds present on uppermost branches delayed and/or reduced shoot growth. Foliage production occurred in all months of the year. There was a unimodal annual rhythm of growth rate reaching a maximum in summer and a minimum in winter. Variable water supply, however, influenced production to peak in spring, summer or autumn. No shoot growth occurs in E. maculata at Kioloa when daily mean temperature (averaged for weekly intervals) falls below c. 10½C in winter. An upper temperature limit for growth could not be defined. The species apparently lacks dormancy mechanisms. Shoot growth is 'opportunistic' and occurs whenever environmental conditions are favourable. Patterns of leaf production and leaf fall were variable but peaks showed a general synchrony. Leaf fall, however, tended to lag behind leaf production. Leaves of all ages were shed but main losses were from older cohorts. Some 49% (s.d.±18%) of new leaves were lost while still small or immature, mainly during periods of vigorous shoot growth or low water supply. Browse of immature foliage was light. Normal senescence and leaf fall accounted for almost the entire loss of mature foliage.


1968 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 221 ◽  
Author(s):  
DG Morgan

Single plants of Festuca arundinacea (cv. S170) were treated with gibberellic acid (GA) and the sequence of effects on the growth of the whole plant and of various organs followed by means of growth analysis. The first effect of GA was to change the distribution of dry matter between shoot and root and between tillers within the shoot without affecting total plant weight. Shoot growth was increased and resulted in a larger amount of photosynthetic tissue with a higher net assimilation rate; total plant weight increased as a consequence of these effects. The significance of these results in interpreting previous work on the effects of GA on dry matter production in grasses and other plants is discussed.


2006 ◽  
Vol 57 (7) ◽  
pp. 761 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eun-Young Choi ◽  
Ann McNeill ◽  
David Coventry ◽  
James Stangoulis

Within the semi-arid region of south-eastern Australia, high levels of subsoil boron (B) in alkaline soil can limit production of dryland crops. The aim of this research was to investigate the whole plant response to a range of subsoil-extractable B concentrations for a number of crop and weed species common to agricultural areas of South Australia. Specifically, the objectives were to determine (a) the morphological response of the entire root system to high subsoil B and (b) the available B concentrations in subsoil critical for expression of shoot traits commonly used in selection of B tolerance. Barley grass (Hordeum glaucum L.), crop barley (Hordeum vulgare) variety Clipper and breeders’ line VB9953, fababean (Vicia faba var. Fjiord), Lincoln weed (Diplotaxis tenuifolia L.), prickly lettuce (Lactuca serriola), and evening primrose (Oenothera stricta L.) were grown in sealed PVC cylinders (500 mm deep by 150 mm diam.) containing a sandy soil. The concentration of extractable B in the topsoil (0–0.20 m), considered non-toxic, was 0.5 mg/kg for all cylinders but a range of B treatments (0.5, 2.4, 4.3, 6.8, or 12.2 mg/kg) was applied directly to the subsoil (0.30–0.50 m). Increasing the concentration of extractable B in the subsoil decreased root dry weight in this region, but did not reduce water use from subsoil by barley grass or evening primrose. The response of the roots in the topsoil and subsequent responses in the shoot also differed among species. Symptoms of B toxicity in shoots of all the species were observed at subsoil-extractable B concentrations of 12.2 mg/kg and at lower concentrations in some of the crop and weed species. Shoot growth, total water use, and root growth in topsoil of Clipper and Lincoln weed were severely impaired by high subsoil-extractable B, as was topsoil root growth in evening primrose, with the reduction in the weed species being mostly associated with a decrease in taproot dry weight. Barley grass, VB9953, evening primrose, and to a lesser extent fababean and prickly lettuce, maintained shoot growth at all subsoil-extractable B concentrations, despite a reduction in subsoil water use by VB9953. Prickly lettuce and VB9953 also sustained root growth in the topsoil whilst fababean and barley grass increased root growth in the topsoil in response to high subsoil extractable B. There was no direct relationship between the quantity of B accumulated in shoots and detrimental effects on growth. Furthermore, there appeared to be no direct relationship between water uptake and B uptake since irrespective of the effect of subsoil B on either subsoil or total water use, shoot B concentration increased in all the species/genotypes as subsoil B increased. The degree to which plants were deemed to exhibit tolerance was, therefore, highly dependent upon the trait used for assessment. One suggestion in the current study is that shoot dry matter in B toxic soil can be a consistent parameter for considering varieties for tolerance to B toxicity.


1990 ◽  
Vol 20 (7) ◽  
pp. 952-960 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Kauppi ◽  
M. Kiviniitty ◽  
A. Ferm

Comparisons were made of the leaves of sprout-origin and seed-origin shoots of Betulapubescens Ehrh. and B. pendula Roth grown under constant or varying temperatures. Particular attention was paid to leaf structure and other factors affecting the rate of photosynthesis. Differences in shoot growth, leaf size, mesophyll structure, and chlorophyll and nitrogen content were observed between the sprouts and seedlings of both species over the course of the growing season. Many of these differences were reflected in the photosynthesis measurements. The sprouts of both species appeared to show a better photosynthetic capacity in their first growing season than the seedlings, and they continued their height growth longer into the autumn. A distinct decline in the level of photosynthesis took place during the growing season. The results suggest that perhaps because of their higher chlorophyll and nitrogen content, young sprouts benefit more from the extremes of temperature at the beginning and end of the growing season than seedlings of the same age. The optimum temperature was the same for sprouts and seedlings of both species. Whether the superior photosynthetic capacity of sprouts compared with seedlings is maintained in later years remains to be resolved.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.A. Rioux ◽  
C.M. Stephens ◽  
J.P. Kerns

AbstractClarireediasp. (formerly calledSclerotinia homoeocarpa), the fungal pathogen that causes dollar spot of turfgrasses, produces oxalic acid but the role of this toxin inClarireediasp. pathogenesis is unknown. In the current study, whole plant inoculation assays were used to evaluate pathogenesis ofClarireediasp. in various model hosts and investigate the role of oxalic acid in dollar spot disease. These assays revealed that both host endogenous oxalate content and pathogen-produced oxalic acid influence the timing and magnitude of symptom development. In time-course expression analysis, oxalate oxidase and related defense-associated germin-like protein genes in creeping bentgrass showed strong up-regulation starting at 48-72 hpi, indicating that germin-like protein genes are most likely involved in defense following initial contact with the pathogen and demonstrating the importance of oxalic acid inClarireediasp. pathogenesis. Overall, the results of these studies suggest that oxalic acid and host endogenous oxalate content are important for pathogenesis byClarireediasp. and may be associated with the transition from biotrophy to necrotrophy during host infection.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chandrima Shyam ◽  
Amit J. Jhala ◽  
Greg Kruger ◽  
Mithila Jugulam

Abstract Common waterhemp emerges throughout the crop growing season in the Midwestern United States, and as a result, the seedlings are exposed to a wide range of temperature regimes. Typically, 2,4-D is used in the Midwest to control winter annual broad-leaf weeds before planting soybean and in an early post-emergence application in corn and sorghum; however, the evolution of 2,4-D-resistant common waterhemp in several Midwestern states may limit the use of 2.4-D for controlling this problem weed. Moreover, temperature is one of the crucial factors affecting weed control efficacy of 2,4-D. This research investigated the effect of temperature on efficacy of 2,4-D to control 2,4-D susceptible (WHS) and -resistant (WHR) common waterhemp. Do se-response of WHS and WHR to 2,4-D was assessed at two temperature regimes, high (HT; 34/20 °C, d/n) and low (LT; 24/10 °C, d/n). Whole plant dose response study indicated an increased level of 2,4-D resistance in WHR at HT compared to LT. Additional investigation of the physiological mechanism of this response indicated that both WHS and WHR common waterhemp plants rapidly metabolized 14C 2,4-D at HT compared to LT. In conclusion, a rapid metabolism of 2,4-D conferred increased level of resistance to 2,4-D in WHR at HT. Therefore, application of 2,4-D when temperatures are cooler can improve control of 2,4-D resistant common waterhemp.


1992 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 717
Author(s):  
RC Rossiter

Two experiments were conducted in an open-sided glass shelter at Perth during winter. Subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum, L.) seedlings were grown in shallow seed boxes at low plant densities, 2 4 and 2 0 plants/dm2. The effects of a single defoliation involving mainly the removal of cotyledons only, on shoot growth and leaf production were measured at harvest, c. 5 weeks after sowing. Total shoot dry weights were reduced by 15-30% when 40-60% of the leaf area was removed by single defoliations from days 7 to 19 after planting. However, the growth was reduced by almost 70% when both cotyledons were removed (days 7 to 9) before emergence of the unifoliate leaf, i.e. when all of the leaf area was removed. In general, the relative reduction in growth largely depended on the percentage of leaf area removed, rather than on time of removal. Defoliation also reduced the size of trifoliate leaves, and total numbers of trifoliate leaves at harvest. There was a linear relationship between total leaf numbers and shoot dry weights. In the field, these findings are probably of more relevance in terms of insect damage, especially from redlegged earth mites, than for grazing by sheep.


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