The Physiological Basis for Cytokinin Induced Increases in Pod Set in IX93-100 Soybeans
Author(s) -
Dale R. Carlson,
Daniel J. Dyer,
C. Daniel Cotterman,
Richard C. Durley
Publication year - 1987
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.84.2.233
Subject(s) - raceme , point of delivery , abscission , cytokinin , biology , zeatin , main stem , horticulture , botany , riboside , dormancy , exudate , germination , auxin , inflorescence , biochemistry , gene
Previous investigations have shown the feasibility of increasing pod number on legumes by the application of 6-benzylaminopurine (BA) directly to the raceme. These investigations were designed to determine what reproductive parameter was affected by cytokinin application, and if these applications were overcoming a deficiency in root-produced cytokinins during late flowering. Five individual main stem racemes on greenhouse grown soybeans (Glycine max L. Merr.) were treated with 2 millimolar BA. A single application of BA when pods appeared at 25 to 50% of the proximal floral positions resulted in a 58% increase in pod set due primarily to a 33% reduction in floral abscission. Applications of BA at later intervals also resulted in significant reductions in total abscission. When three applications of BA were imposed on the upper five nodes of field grown soybeans, total pod number and seed weight were significantly increased in this section of the canopy by 27 and 18%, respectively. Throughout the flowering period, root pressure exudate was sampled for the subsequent separation and quantification of zeatin, dihydrozeatin, zeatin riboside, dihydrozeatin riboside, and isopentenyladenine. Total cytokinin flux peaked from 0 to 9 days after flowering began, and then dropped to one-half of this level by 15 days postanthesis. The probability that a flower would initiate a pod was directly related to the concentration of total cytokinins present in the exudate when the flower opened.
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