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| Authors: | M. Langens-Gerrits, T. Hol, T. Croes, W. Miller, B. Hardin, T. Croes, G.-J. de Klerk |
| Keywords: | GA = gibberellins A4+7, FW = fresh weight, CT = cold treatment, DW = dry weight |
Abstract:
We studied the effect of dormancy-breaking on growth and carbohydrate metabolism in bulblets of Lilium speciosum regenerated in vitro.
Dormancy was broken with a cold treatment or a gibberellin treatment.
Almost all bulblets sprouted after a cold treatment of six weeks at 5°C. Sprouting and growth were reduced when a shorter cold treatment was given.
A soak in a GA-solution also gave high sprouting percentages (with the optimal concentration of 3 mg.l-1 GA4+7, 80% of the bulblets sprouted). However, growth after a GA-treatment was poor and leaves were smaller than in cold-treated bulblets.
A combination of a partial cold treatment and a GA-treatment had no effect on growth.
We studied carbohydrate metabolism in cold-treated and GA-treated bulblets.
During the cold treatment starch and glucomannans were broken down; soluble sugar content increased.
During GA-treatment no changes in these carbohydrates occurred.
In the first four weeks after planting, about 70% of the starch was broken down in the outer scales of GA-treated bulblets after that, starch breakdown stopped.
Thus, poor leaf growth in GA-treated bulblets might be due to incomplete or too late breakdown of carbohydrates in the outer scales.
Although new scales were initiated in GA-treated bulblets, these scales did not grow; indicating that leaves of GA-treated bulblets did not produce assimilates efficiently.
An increase of soluble sugars in the outer scales of GA-treated bulblets after planting, might indicate a low sink strength in the leaves.
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