biologia plantarum

International journal on Plant Life established by Bohumil Němec in 1959

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Results 1591 to 1620 of 1797:

Improved thermal method of continual recording the transpiration flow rate dynamics

J. Kučera, J. Čermák, M. Penka

Biologia plantarum 19:413-420, 1977 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02922976

The analysis of the dynamic properties of thermal methods of transpiration flow measurement was performed and the measuring system developed, capable of quantitative measurements of fast flow changes (in minutes). The system is specified with a constant automatically maintained temperature difference between the heated and reference points in the measured part of the plant. System's output signal related to measured quantity is linear. The system has been under longterm testing in full grown trees using the method of heat balance with direct electric heating of the xylem. The results obtained so far may be considered very good.

Presumed role of mucilage of plantain seeds in spread of tobacco mosaic virus

Zdeňka Procházková

Biologia plantarum 19:259-263, 1977 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02923125

A strain of tobaoco mosaic virus(TMVbs) isolated fromPlantago major L. is not seed-borne with this plant species; however, plantain seeds and the mucilage on their surface also contain the virus. The mucilage shows a very low infectivity; the visoous mucilage inhibits infeotion in rubbed leaves both in a mixture with the virus and if applied before (but not after) the inoculation of the virus. Polysaccharides and hexuronic acids were detected in the great plantain seed mucilage. A mixture of mucilage and viras stored at room temperature showed s low infectivity until 33 days, but the infectivity increased oonspicuously on the 40th day, apparently simultaneously with the decay of mucilage. Polysaccharides are suggested as being responsible for the inhibition. They affect the inoculated leaf but not the virus, as ascertained by eleotron mioroscopy and serology. The seed mucilage being an important factor in the spread of plantain seeds may act as a vehicle of the virus as well.

The orientation of cell wall microtubules in wheat coleoptile segments subjected to phytohormone treatment

Alena Volfová, L. Chvojka, Jana Haňkovská

Biologia plantarum 19:421-425, 1977 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02922977

The effect of plant hormones was studied on the growth of excised coleoptile segments of wheat plantlets grown under daylight conditions. In addition to the change in growth, that in the orientation of microtubules and cellulose microfibrils was investigated in parenchyma cells. Following a 6-h treatment gibberellin, and still more kinetin, stímulated the thickening of segments, which became evident also in an altered orientation of microtubules. Whereas in the control the microtubules and wall microfibrils were oriented randomly, following gibberellin treatment they were all parallel and formed an acute angle with the longitudinal cell axis. A still more pronounced difference resulted after kinetin treatment, when microtubules were localized parallel with the longitudinal cell axis. Auxin had the opposite effect: it stimulated the elongation of the segments, which became evident in a transverse orientation of both wall microtubules and microfibrils.

RNA synthesis in shoot apices and young leaves ofchenopodium rubrum during three dark periods of photoperiodic floral induction

J. Krekule, Frideta Seidlová

Biologia plantarum 19:292-299, 1977 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02923131

The rate of RNA synthesis in shoot apices of the short-day (SD) plantChenopodium rubrum was compared in three successive dark periods required for flowering.32P label was used for fractionation of RNA on slabs of polyacrylamide gels on mioroscopic slides. Incorporation of32P and3H-uridine into apices was followed using histoautoradiography under identical conditions for oomparison. The lowest rate of synthesis was found on the seoond day of induction. A slight increase was usually observed in the third dark period, possibly linked with the first anatomical and/or morphological changes whioh have appeared due to mduction. Most of the label was found in ribosomal BNA in this case. After the plants wero transferred from light to darkness RNA synthesis in the shoot apex decreased within three hours. There was good agreement between results obtained by eleotrophoresis and by histoautoradiography. All previous observations which have been obtained using cytophotometry and histoautoradiography were confirmed.
The rate of synthesis of BNA in shoot apices is paralleled by that in primordial leavea. The marked rise of RNA synthesis during the inductive period, found in some planta requiring only single inductive cycle, was not established inChenopodium. A different pattern of RNA synthesis between plants flowering after one and after several dark periods, is suggested in discussion.

An attempt to lteplare vernalization hy application of gibberellic acid in biennial hyoscyamus niger L.

Catherine Mugnibr

Biologia plantarum 19:40-47, 1977 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02922484

Applications of various amounts of GA3 onto the shoot apex of biennial rosette-plantHyoscyamus niger L., exposed to long days and non vernalized, caused internodes formation and stem elongation. The stem length was proportional to the amount of GA3 applied. Number and length of developed internodes and the whole length of the shoot were maximal in plants treated with a greater amount of GA3. In the end, stem elongation stopped and plants formed perchedrosettes without flowering. Hence, gibberellic acid participates in mechanisms of flowering only by indirect effect on stem elongation and not directly on flower formation itself.

Brassica campestris as a model for studying the effects of exogenous growth substances on flowering in long-day plants

J. Krekule, Frideta Seidlová

Biologia plantarum 19:462-468, 1977 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02922988

Photoperiodic responses of seedlings of long-day plantBrassica campestris L. cv. Ceres were investigated at different ages and varying length of inductive period. It was found that photoperiodie response increased with age. All plants flowered after one inductive cycle beginning with a light-period of 16h, but remained in the vegetative phase when kept under short-days (16h darkness, 8h light).
Both auxins (IAA and NAA) and cytokinins (kinetin and benzyladenine) inhibited flowering when applied to the plumule or via the roots immediately before the inductive photoperiod. This inhibitory effects was confined to bud formation, whereas the rate of leaf initiation remained mostly unchanged. Only high concentrations of growth substances also affected the growth of roots and leaves. These results agree, in general, with the effects of growth substances in the short-day plantChenopodium rubrum.

Stabilization of virus particles from the mosaic diseasedfreesia by phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride during purification and storage

M. Čech, Věra Mokrá, Hana Branišová

Biologia plantarum 19:65-70, 1977 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02922489

Threadlike particles from mosaic freesia aggregate during and shortly after the purification which is followed by full degradation into insoluble amorphous precipitate. This irreversible process is caused predominantly by host plant proteases. Such degradation can be completely inhibited if the virus complex is purified and stored in the presence of 0.1 mM phenyl-methylsulfonylfluoride. A modified purification method which gives a higher yield and the virua preparation of greater purity is described.

The effect of 2,4-dinitrophenol on the absorption and translocation of calcium by pumpkin plants

Olga Votrubová-Vaňousová

Biologia plantarum 19:166-172, 1977 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02923104

The study deals with the absorption and translocation of Ca2+ by án intact plant of pumpkinCucurbita pepo L. and with the effect of various concentrations of 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP) on these processes. The absorption of Ca2+ was reduced by the application of this inhibitor, but not completely stopped. The translocation of Ca2+ into shoots was affected more expressively: it was almost completely inhibited by higher DNP concentrations. The uptake of Rb+ is aubstantially more influeneed than that of Ca2+: higher inhibitor concentrations caused its complete cessation.

The combined effect of soil salinity and CCC on dry matter accumulation and yield of wheat plants

A. I. Gabr, M. M. Sharaky, S. A. El-Ashkar

Biologia plantarum 19:101-106, 1977 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02926744

The rise in soil salinity level tended to decrease shoot dry weight, and, grain yield per plant and, to some extent, weight of I grain. This effect was usually more pronounced in the presence of CCC. On the other hand, the shoot dry weight was increased by CCC in salinity absence but the reverse at 0.8 % salinization degree. The grain yield per plant was raised by CCC in the presence or absence of salinity, particularly in the latter case. The dry matter accumulation in the shoot system (at earing stage) rather than grain yield tended to be much more affected, whether regarding the negative response to salinity or the positive one to CCC.

Street, H. E. (ed.): Tissue culture and plant science 1974

J. Tupý

Biologia plantarum 17:457, 1975 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02921060

Invaginations in plant cell protoplasts containing mycoplasma-like bodies (MLO)

O. Králík, J. Brčák

Biologia plantarum 17:214-218, 1975 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02920837

MLO containing invaginations were found in protoplasts of phloem parenchyma cells in symptomless young leaves ofRibes houghtonianumJancz. infected with a yellows disease. The invaginations originate between the cell wall and plasmalemma, usually at plasmodesmata, and change apparently into superficial vesicles in the protoplast; they are entirely or partially limited by host plasmalemma. The formations mentioned occur in parenchyma cells which contain normal organelles. Sometimes they are divided by a smooth membrane system enclosing MLO. Besides MLO the invaginations contain in some cases slimy fibrils resembling the P-protein in sieve tubes. The MLO bodies seen in invaginations have usually a diameter of 50-250 nm and their plasmalemma (unit membrane) is identical with the plasmalemma of MLO bodies occurring in sieve tubes. However, only few MLO bodies in invaginations are electron dense, so that they resemble naturally degenerated forms of MLO. Similar MLO containing invaginations were formerly described from some leafhoppers transmitting MLO.

Nobel, P. S.: An introduction to biophysical plant physiology

J. Čatský

Biologia plantarum 17:153, 1975 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02920979

Role of abscisic acid in the closure of stomata in some arid zone plant species

D. N. Sen, D. D. Chawan

Biologia plantarum 17:198-201, 1975 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02920834

Initially closed stomata in isolated leaf epidermal peelings ofCalotropis procera, Prosopis cineraria andTephrosia purpurea, opened when incubated in distilled water in light or in darkness. Water-induced open stomata closed down on incubation in abscisic acid (0.01 ppm) solution within half an hour. Sodium chloride induced the opening of stomatal aperture. NaCl-induced open stomata also completely closed down when incubated in abscisic acid solution, but open again when transferred to NaCl.

Susceptibility ofArabidopsis thaliana (L.)Heynh. to infection with some plant viruses

Věra Sosnová, Z. Polák

Biologia plantarum 17:156-158, 1975 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02920981

Arabidopsis thaliana was susceptible to eight out of ten investigated viruses with six of which it did not show any symptoms of local infection; this appeared only in two cases.A. thaliana was a symptomless carrier for three viruses. The considerably distinct systemic symptoms after the infection with turnip yellow mosaic, tomato black ring, cucumber mosaic and cabbage black ring viruses make possible a very reliable and specific distinction of the causal agens.A. thaliana could be used for these viruses as a differential host.

Etherington, J. R.: Environment and plant ecology

J. Čatský

Biologia plantarum 17:415, 1975 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02921053

Burns, G. W.:The plant Kingdom

Inorid Tichá

Biologia plantarum 17:230, 1975 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02920843

Transpiration in seven plant species colonizing a fishpond shore

J. Květ

Biologia plantarum 17:434-442, 1975 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02921056

In 7 species (Eleocharis palustrisR. Br.,Juncus bufonius L.,Gypsophila muralis L.,Trifolium repens L.,Agrostis stolonifera L.,Potentilla anserina L. andAchillea millefolium L.) growing in a gradient of habitats from aquatic to terrestrial, on a sandy fishpond shore in Southern Bohemia, Czechoslovakia, the daily course of transpiration rate and water content was assessed gravimetrically in their cut-off transpiring parts on two typical summer days. Transpiration rate was largely controlled by microclimate but depressions occurred inJuncus and in some species growing in the drier habitats. The highest instantaneous transpiration rate and total daily transpiration per unit dry weight, about 100 mg g-1 min-1 and 50 g g-1 d-1, respectively, were recorded inAchillea andTrifolium. The water turnover rate ranged from 16.1 g g-1 (H2O) d-1 inJuncus to 10.7 inGypsophila. The estimated daily maximum water saturation deficit was highest inEleocharis (45.7%) and lowest inAchillea (15.0%). The adaptational significance of the observed phenomena is discussed.

Effects of different 2,4-D concentrations on the cytogenetic behaviour of plant cells culturedin vitro

B. D. Singh, B. L. Harvey

Biologia plantarum 17:167-174, 1975 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02920829

Cytogenetic effects of different concentrations of 2,4-D on suspension cultures ofVicia hajastanaGrossh. andHaplopappus gracilis(Nutt.) Gray were studied using a simple, chemically defined medium. InVicia, the frequency of dicentric chromosomes showed a negative association with the 2,4-D concentration. In both the species, the frequencies of anaphase bridges were negatively associated, while those of the diploid cells showed a positive association with the 2,4-D concentration in the culture medium. A decrease in the frequency of diploid cells was observed in the cultures transferred to a lower concentration of 2,4-D. This decrease was transient inVicia, while inH. gracilis a new equilibrium at a lower level was established. Both endoreduplication and selection appear to be involved in the achievement of the lower equilibrium inH. gracilis, although selection appears to be the major factor.

Moore, T. C.: Research experiences in plant physiology. A laboratory manual

Ingrid Tichá

Biologia plantarum 17:234, 1975 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02920845

On plant alcohol dehydrogenases

Sylva Leblová, Ilona Zimáková, Jana Barthová, Dana Ehlichová

Biologia plantarum 13:33-42, 1971 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02930744

We have found in a number of plants (lentil, lupine, bean, barley, oats, rye, wheat, cucumber, melon, flax, sunflower and rape) that varying amounts of ethanol are formed under natural anaerobiosis and, that in later growth periods these plants continue to react to anaerobiosis by formation of ethanol. When the testa has opened in germinating plants or, when plants are transferred from the anaerobic atmosphere to air, ethanol disappears.
Plants contain alcohol dehydrogenases, the activity of which depends on the alcohol concentration in their tissue; the maximum concentration is reached during natural anaerobiosis, rising in the course of further growth when the plants are kept in a nitrogen atmosphere.
Alcohol dehydrogenases of the plants studied are localised in the soluble cell fraction notsedimenting at 120 000 g, their pH optimum is in the weakly alkaline region and their Michaelis constants are equal in order of magnitude (10-5m). They are all inhibited in the same way by Zn2+, Cu2+, Hg2+, B4O72- ions, p-chloromercuric benzoate, iodoacetate, EDTA and phenantroline, which may be considered as evidence of the presence of -SH groups. The specific activity of alcohol dehydrogenase preparations is higher in plants grown in light than in plants grown in the dark.
The specific activity of plant alcohol dehydrogenases can be increased by precipitation with ammonium sulphate by at most one order of magnitude, while all the activity is lost by this purification process in the case of cereals.
The following isoenzyme composition of ADH was found by means of electrophoresis on polyacrylamide: the enzyme from poas and sunflower, for example, is composed of three, that from wheat and oats six, the enzyme from maize and barley of five isoenzymes.

Tryptophan synthase activity, tryptophan and serine contents in pea (Pisum sativum L.) plants during their ontogenesis

V. Horák

Biologia plantarum 18:442-449, 1976 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02922551

Considerable changes in tryptophan synthase aotivity occur during the ontogenesis of pea plants (Pisum sativum L.) in their individual parts. Maximal tryptophan synthase activity is connected with the vigorous growth period of the individual organs and of the entire plant. The content of free serine which is present in excess and is one of the substrates in the reaction catalyzed by tryptophan synthase, also changes, as well as the content of free tryptophan, the product of the reaction. The changes in the contents of these amino acids do not correspond to the variation in tryptophan synthase activity and mainly follow the alterations in the total nitrogen metabolísm. The limiting factor in the biosynthesis ofL-tryptophanin vivo is probably the availability of the aromatic precursor, above all of indole-3-glycerophosphate. The content of bound tryptophan also shifts in the pea plants owing to the enrichment of proteins in older parts of pea plants with this amino acid.

Which water potential? Differences between isopiestic thermocouple psychrometer measurements of intact and excised plant materials

Man Singh Manohar

Biologia plantarum 13:247-256, 1971 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02931017

Water potentials of leaves from well-watered plants were measured. There were species-specific differences in both the total and the osmotic potentials of pea (Pisum sativum), tradescantia (Tradescantia versicolor), rose (Rosa hybrida), bitter lemon (Citrus aurantium) and olive (Olea europaea). With tradescantia the potential measured after the destruction of turgor by freezing was less negative than before, a result which suggests that the value obtained is not identical with the real osmotic potential of the leaf. detached leaves of all species showed less negative water potential readings, and those of pea even a less negative osmotic potential, when cut into five pieces than when measured intact. Application of vaseline to the cut surface of the leaves reduced this effect with rose and olive, though not with tradescantia and pea. Measurements were also made of the water potentials of comparable leaves of tradescantia and bitter lemon, attached to and detached from their plants; when bitter lemon leaves were detached and watered through their petioles which protruded outside the thermocouple chamber, their potential became considerably less negative than when the same leaves had been attached to well watered plants. However, similar leaves whose cut petioles were introduced into the thermocouple chamber registered an even less negative potential.
The results are consistent with the hypothesis that when a leaf is cut off a plant, and even more so when it is cut into sections, the water previously held by matrix forces becomes available to dilute the "spilled" cell sap and to be absorbed by adjacent cells and thereby to increase their turgor and render the net water potential of the leaf less negative. Similarly, the apparent negative turgor of the succulent, tradescantia leaves is likely to be due to dilution of the osmotic component by cell wall water. The discrepancies between the readings of attached and detached leaves indicate a considerable whole-plant matrix component, and the results as a whole suglest that thermocouple psychrometer readings carried out on detached and even more on cut-up leaves may be artifacts and that it is desirable to determine water potentials on leaves attached to their plants.
The work was supported by a Government of Israel Fellowship and was conducted at the Department of Pomology and Viticulture, Faculty of Agriculture of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rehovot, Israel.

The effect of pre-cultivation of tobacco tissue culture on enzymatic separation of protoplasts from various cell types

Z. Opatrný, Běla Landová, Jana Opatrná

Biologia plantarum 17:139-141, 1975 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02920975

A method of enzymatic separation of protoplasts from long-term tissue culture ofNicotiana tabacum L. is described. The efficiency of this method is dependent on conditions of separation and on the portion of meristematic cells in the tissue culture. This portion can be increased by pre-cultivations of the tissue on medium containing suitable concentration of hormones. The knowledge of the micromorphology of the filamentous culture enables us to investigate the course of release of protoplasts from various cell types. A preferential lysis of cell walls was observed between neighbouring cells in filaments and the fusion of their protoplasts was recorded. The preservation of cell walls which are not in a contact with other cells may be a result of the cell wall heterogeneity.

Absence of biological activity in oxidation products of indoleacetic acid

F. Sabater, J. Cuello, J. Sanchez Bravo, M. Acosta

Biologia plantarum 18:460-463, 1976 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02922555

The main enzymatic oxidation products of IAA have been tested for biological activity, using as bioassay the straight-growth test ofAvena coleoptile. After being purified by rechromatography, none of these products (including methyleneoxindole) exhibited biological activity within the wide range of concentrations employed; consequently, the results accord with the evidence that IAA is the true hormone of plant growth.

The serological specificity of S alleles of homozygous incompatible lines of the marrow-stem kale (Brassica oleracea var.acephala DC.)

V. Kučera, J. Polák

Biologia plantarum 17:50-54, 1975 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02921074

The preparation of antisera against S alleles of homozygous incompatible lines of the marrow-stem kale (Brassica oleracea var.acephala DC.) is described. The antisera obtained reacted specifically with homologous antigens on using the serological method of double diffusion into agar. The results confirmed the specificity of S alleles of incompatible lines of the marrow-stem kale.

Cytochrome oxidase and ascorbic acid oxidase activities in cereal plants

Naděía Růžičková-Skřipská

Biologia plantarum 18:36-43, 1976 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02922331

Cytochrome oxidase and ascorbic acid oxidase activities were investigated in rye, wheat, barley and oat plants. The variations in the activity of both enzymes was followed in the course of the initial 28 days of growth, as well as at the phase of milk ripeness, namely in the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial cell fractions of roots, leaves and spikes.
Both enzymes were active in all measurements. Cytochrome oxidase mostly exhibited a higher activity than ascorbio acid oxidase. The activity of the former enzyme was substantially higher in the mitochondrial fraction of leaves, roots and spikes of the four experimental plants in comparison with the cytoplasmic fraction. On the contrary, the ascorbic acid oxidase activity varied in both cell fractions according to the plant species, organ and growth phase.
The variations in the activity of both enzymes exhibited on the whole a course similar to that of the respiration rate. During the first 14 to 21 days of growth the enzyme activities increased up to the maximum. This was thon followed at first by a rapid, later on by a slow decrease. The course of variations in the enzyme activities was, with certain exceptions, alike in all the four plant species investigated.

Phosphorus absorption by intact maize plants from flowing solutions influenced by 2.4-dinitrophenol and viscosity of solution

Radmila Čížková-Macůrková, Z. Laštůvka

Biologia plantarum 18:464-468, 1976 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02922556

The investigation of phosphorus absorption by intact plants during a short period has above all confirmed the validity of the results obtained in the foregoing study of the kinetics of absorption by excised roots. Further, the results show the unquestionably important role of mass flow in transporting ions to plant roots, mainly at lower and medium concentrations, that is, from about 0.1 to 10 mM. Under conditions of growth close to the optimum, the supply by means of mass flow can be sufficient even at lower concentrations of phosphorus, such as 1.47 mM KH2PO4, or the absorption of phosphorus by plants can be higher than in the case of ions being transported to roots by diffusion. With a higher absorption the phosphorus distribution somewhat changes as well, relatively more of it being accumulated in the roots. 2.4-DNP applied to the nutrient solution at a concentration of 10-5 M reduces the phosphorus absorption.

Effect of different sugars on flowering ofChenopodium rubrum L. in dependence on the conditions of germination and initial growth

Lola Teltscherová, Dagmar Pleskotová

Biologia plantarum 18:221-226, 1976 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02922810

Flowering ofChenopodium rubrum seedlings fed different sugars at a concentration of 0.6 and 0.4 M, reap, during a single inductive cycle was stimulated or inhibited in dependence on the conditions of germination and initial growth. Plants allowed to germinate at alternating temperatures of 28 °C and 5 °C showed a slower initial growth and their development was stimulated by some sugars as compared to controls induced in the absence of sugars. Plants germinated at alternating temperatures of 32 °C and 5 °C exhibited a rapid initial growth and flowering was inhibited after induction in the presence of sugars. On the other hand, development proceeded more rapidly in control plants induced in the absence of sugars after germination at the higher temperature than after germination at the lower one. The differences between the two variants quoted above could be observed also after induction by two 16 h dark cycles. Glucose and sucrose were most effective in stimulating flowering under appropriate conditions of germination. Fructose was less effective and the action of maltose was very weak. Xylose, ribose and galactose were innocuous, while arabinose, glucoso-6-phosphate and mannitol were toxic to the plants. The sugars inhibited root growth in all cases and led to an increase in starch accumulation in the underground and overground plant organs. At a concentration of 0.6 M they mostly inhibited the length of the cotyledons and, especially, of the first leaf; at a concentration of 0.4 M growth of the overground organs was stimulated. The results are discussed with respect to the possible ohanges in photoperiodic sensitivity brought about by the rate of initial growth.

Nutation rhythm of growing pine hypocotyl (Pinus silvestris L.) interferred with a phototropic stimulus

M. Spurný

Biologia plantarum 18:251-259, 1976 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02922368

The interaction of nutation oscillation and phototropic curvature mechanisms of growing pine hypocotyl(Pinus silvestris L.) was investigated. Nutation parameters of growing hypocotyl are not affected by continuous lateral illumination. Frequency and nutation amplitudes undergo changes which are dependent on plant development and are nearly the same when plants are illuminated from one side or from above. Lateral illumination, however, induces a phase shift. This deviation from a normal nutation rhythm usually disappears after a period of time equal to three nutation revolutions,i.e. after 12 h.
The positive phototropio response of nutating hypocotyl is dependent on the phase in which the hypocotyl is exposed to the lateral illumination:(a) nutation perihelium,(b) ahelium and(c) nutation interphase. These response-variants are compared with the expected gradients of plant hormones at the opposite sites of the hypocotyle. Analysis of location of the individual movement reactions(i.e. oscillations as a component of the geocontrol system and phototropic curvature) together with the determination of the zone of maximum elongation indicates the existence of different receptory centres of these two movement systems. In the case of the phototropic response reaction it is possible to consider the presence of different photo- and biochemical mechanisms at least for a part of this system.

Effects of growth regulators, steroids and estrogen fraction from sage plants on flowering of a long day plant,Salvia splendens, grown under non-inductive light conditions

J. Kopcewicz, Z. Porazinski

Biologia plantarum 16:132-135, 1974 | DOI: 10.1007/BF02920789

The flowering ofSalvia splendensSellow under noninductive short days is promoted by exogenous application of estrogen fraction isolated from flowering sage plants, gibberellin GA4+7 and to some extend N6-benzyladenine and estradiol. The most active is the combination of GA4+7 with estrogen fraction. No synergistic action of GA4+7 with N6-benzyladenine estradiol was found.

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