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THE EMERGENCE AND DEVELOPMENT OF BRANCHES IN CROTALARIA JUNCEA AND THEIR RELATIONSHIP TO FLOWERING
Author(s) -
Nanda K. K.
Publication year - 1962
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.1002/j.1537-2197.1962.tb14947.x
Subject(s) - biology , inflorescence , shoot , botany , raceme , period (music) , lateral shoot , plant stem , horticulture , axillary bud , explant culture , biochemistry , physics , acoustics , in vitro
N anda , K. K. (Forest Res. Inst., Dehra Dun, India.) The emergence and development of branches in Crotalaria juncea and their relationship to flowering. Amer. Jour. Bot. 49(4): 334–341. Illus. 1962.—Seeds of Crotalaria juncea L. were sown in pots on March 23, 1959, and records were kept of the dates of emergence of individual branches and the appearance of flower buds on them. Periodical observations were also made of the height of the main shoot as well as its branches and the number of nodes and leaves borne by them throughout the year. The main shoot elongates rapidly and terminates in an inflorescence. Development of lateral buds remains completely arrested during the period of rapid elongation and is initiated only after the appearance of the floral buds when it takes place in basipetal sequence. The flowering of the branches also takes place in a basipetal manner. This mode of emergence of branches and their flowering are exhibited even by secondary and tertiary branches. The length attained by these branches is very small as the flower buds appear soon after their emergence. In contrast, the branches formed towards the middle of May continue to elongate for a considerable period and become many times longer than the main shoot or the branches produced earlier in the season. The vegetative period of these branches is also very much prolonged. These differences in the height attained by branches produced at different times of the year and the basipetal sequence in the emergence of branches and their flowering appear to be under the control of some physio‐chemical changes which cause the transformation of the growing apex from the vegetative to the reproductive state. This holds good irrespective of whether these changes are brought about as a result of a favorable environmental complex, as is the case with the main shoot and late‐formed, much elongated branches, or are due to the favorable internal conditions produced within the plant as a result of the completion of the developmental process of the main shoot, as happens in the case of branches produced earlier in the season.

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