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ISHS Acta Horticulturae 618: XXVI International Horticultural Congress: Environmental Stress and Horticulture Crops

INFLUENCE OF LONG-TERM AND SHORT-TERM TEMPERATURE DROPS ON ACCLIMATION AND DE-ACCLIMATION IN CUCUMBER COLD RESISTANCE

Authors:   E.F. Markovskaya, E.G. Sherudilo, M.I. Sysoyeva
Keywords:   dynamic of cold resistance, daily temperature, greenhouse, shock protein
Abstract:
It is known that temperature drop affects plant morphogenesis. At the same time the drop is usually at cold acclimating temperatures which can cause increase in cold resistance. In the literature little attention is paid to the effect of DROP on plant thermoresistance. The aim of our work was to compare phenomenological aspect of the dynamics of cucumber plant cold resistance under short-term (DROP) and long-term temperature decrease on plant acclimation and de-acclimation. Twenty-two day dynamics of cold resistance of cucumber plants was studied. The control plants were grown under constant temperature of 20°C, experimental plants under constant temperature of 12°C for 6 days (long-term treatment) and under conditions of temperature DROP to 12&°C for a 2 and 6 hour period (short-term treatments). To study the de-acclimation under temperature treatments, plants were returned to 20°C for two weeks. Plant cold resistance was estimated by the LT50 method based on survival. Under long-term temperature decrease, maximum cold resistance was reached at the end of the 1st - beginning of the 2nd day. Further increase in the exposure up to five days did not influence the resistance. Under short-term temperature drop, the level of cold resistance doubled by the end of the 5th day. After the long-term treatment (after-effect) cold resistance returned to the control level on the 4th day, but after the shot-term drops on the 9-16th day. These results allow concluding that additional ways of elevating plant cold resistance participate in plant response to the effects of diurnal temperature fluctuations.

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