|
|
FLOWERING TO SENESCENCE |
|
Flowering
|
|
|
|
In short-day plants flowering is inhibited by the Pfr
form of phytochrome The night needs to be long enough for Pfr accumulated during the day to revert to Pr or be broken down altogether. If the nights are interrupted by a brief period of low-intensity light Pr will be converted back to Pfr and the plant will not flower. In long-day plants flowering is promoted by Pfr. If the nights are too long Pfr disappears and flowering is not induced. In this situation"night breaks" of low-intensity light will restore Pfr and flowering can occur even though the plant is growing in short days. Flowering is also regulated by temperature. In herbaceous perennials and biennials, trees and shrubs that grow in temperate areas, flower buds develop or become fully differentiated during the winter months. This cold requirement for flowering is exploited in vernalization treatments where plants like Easter lilies are exposed to low temperatures in order to induce flowering at a particular time. In some plants flowering can be induced either by long days or by cold exposure, whereas others require both for optimum flower development. Treatments with gibberellins can often be substituted for the photoperiodic (long or short day) or temperature requirements. Fruit and seed development Early seed development is associated with cell division and synthesis, so that immature seeds contain hormones associated with growth, auxin, GA and cytokinin. As seeds mature they usually begin to desiccate, abscisic acid increases and dormancy sets in. Senescence
|
|
The"century plant" Agave americana takes about 30 years (not 100) to grow to maturity and flower. It then dies after setting seed |
|
However senescence occurs, the underlying changes are very similar. There is a switch from synthesis to breakdown of cell structure. Photosynthesis declines as the chloroplast becomes a chromoplast. Proteins and other polymers are broken down by digestive enzymes. In perennial plants some of the amino acids and other small molecules are withdrawn from the leaves before they are shed. In this way the plant recovers some of its investment. Senescing plant parts often produce ethylene and senescence is generally promoted by ethylene or ethylene-releasing compounds. One of the major uses of ethephon is to promote senescence of tobacco leaves prior to harvest. Abscission |
|
This cabbage was stored in the same room as apples, which produce large amounts of ethylene. The ethylene stimulated abscission of the leaves from the stalk, even though they were immature. |
|
Dormancy In true dormancy plants will not grow even if they are given optimum environmental conditions. Dormancy sets in at the end of the growing season as the days get shorter and temeperatures fall. The phytochrome system is a part of the control mechanism; low Pfr levels a decline in GA and rise in ABA are all associated with the onset of dormancy. To emerge from dormancy plants generally require a period of low temperature, weeks in the case of herbaceous perennials to months for many trees. After this cold requirement has been met the plant will grow again when environmental conditions become favorable. In temperate and colder regions dormancy is associated with cold-hardening of above ground structures. While dormancy is a prerequisite for hardening it is not necessarily associated with it. The overwintering structures of geophytes are protected by being underground and are not particularly cold hardy. Dormancy also occurs in some tropical plants as a means of survival during dry rather than cold seasons. Copyright © Michael Knee, |