Premium
Sequential and non‐sequential pattern of monocarpic senescence in two rice cultivars
Author(s) -
Mondal W. A.,
Choudhuri M. A.
Publication year - 1984
Publication title -
physiologia plantarum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.351
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1399-3054
pISSN - 0031-9317
DOI - 10.1111/j.1399-3054.1984.tb05910.x
Subject(s) - cultivar , biology , oryza sativa , senescence , anthesis , photoperiodism , chlorophyll , agronomy , horticulture , biochemistry , gene , microbiology and biotechnology
Two rice ( Oryza sativa L.) cultivars viz. Ratna (dwarf, photoperiod insensitive) and Masuri (tall, photoperiod sensitive) were selected to analyse their mode of senescence. At the vegetative stage, leaf senescence, expressed as the loss of chlorophyll and protein and a decline in the activities of catalase and alkaline pyrophosphatase, was found to be a function of chronological age (sequential) in both cultivars. With advancing reproductive development, cultivar Masuri retained this sequential mode but cultivar Ratna showed a non‐sequential mode of senescence where the flag leaf senesced earlier than the older second leaf, unlike that observed at the vegetative stage. Masuri showed a more rapid senescence than Ratna. In both cultivars, excision of any leaf during anthesis initially retarded the senescence of the remaining leaves on the defoliated plants but soon after, at the grain maturation stage, the leaf senescence started at a higher rate compared with that of the intact control plant. In Ratna, when either the second or the third leaf was removed, the flag leaf senesced faster than that of the unexcised control plant. In Masuri, when either the flag or the third leaf was removed, the second leaf senesced earlier than that of the intact control. In both cultivars, excision of the third leaf showed the least detrimental effect on yield. The greatest detrimental effect on grain yield per plant was observed in Ratna when the flag leaf was removed and in Masuri when the second leaf was removed. Mobilization of metabolites from the source leaf to the sink and the consequent depletion in the leaf as the cause of senescence is discussed.