ISHS


Acta
Horticulturae
Home


Login
Logout
Status


Help

ISHS Home

ISHS Contact

Consultation
statistics
index


Search
 
ISHS Acta Horticulturae 580: IV International ISHS Symposium on Artificial Lighting

HOW MUCH LIGHT IS NEEDED FOR THE PREVENTION OF FLOWERING OF CUT CHRYSANTHEMUMS WHEN USING HIGH INTENSITY HPS LIGHTING AS A NIGHT BREAK

Author:   T. Blacquière
Keywords:   Dendranthema indicum, cyclic lighting, night break sensitivity
Abstract:
Chrysanthemums (Dendranthema indicum cultivars) are grown worldwide as a year round cut flower crop. Since the 1960’s photoperiodic lighting and darkening can program plants very precisely. Recently, there has been an increase in the use of supplementary lighting for chrysanthemums with HPS lamps being also used for night break lighting. The traditionally used incandescent lighting system provides a photosynthetically active photon integral of 7200-8600 μmol m-2 per night. From experiments with a gradient of lighting from a photosynthetic photon flux (PPF) of 0.02 μmol m–2 s–1 to 3.5 μmol m–2 s–1 it was clear that depending on the season 1000 to 4000 μmol m-2 per night was enough when the night break was given after 8 hours of darkness. In order to provide the same amount of light with an HPS system as the cyclic incandescent system, 8 minutes was determined to be sufficient. This was tested and validated at a commercial chrysanthemum propagator, particularly with cultivars having a high longday leaf number.

Download Adobe Acrobat Reader (free software to read PDF files)

580_6     580     580_8

URL www.actahort.org      Hosted by K.U.Leuven      © ISHS