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Removal of the stem terminal and application of auxin change carbohydrates in Pinus banksiana cuttings during propagation
Author(s) -
Haissig Bruce E.
Publication year - 1989
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.1399-3054.1989.tb04966.x
Subject(s) - cutting , carbohydrate , auxin , sucrose , botany , horticulture , biology , basal (medicine) , chemistry , biochemistry , endocrinology , gene , insulin
This study determined how surgical removal of the stem terminal, with indole‐3‐butyric acid (IBA) treatment, influenced concentrations and partitioning of carbohydrates in Pinus banksiana Lamb, cuttings during propagation. Seedlings and cuttings that originated from 90‐day‐old stock plants were untreated or treated by removing the stem terminal, followed by application of IBA to the severed apical or basal (cuttings only) stem. Fresh and dry weights of the basal 1‐cm stems of cuttings were determined daily for the first 10 days of propagation (i.e., before roots were visible). In addition, basal 1‐cm stems, upper (ca 9‐cm) stems and needles of seedlings and cuttings were analyzed for sucrose, soluble reducing sugar and total non‐structural carbohydrate. Net concentrations of each carbohydrate in cuttings were obtained by subtracting corresponding concentrations for similarly treated seedlings, yielding data directly related to only the physiology of rooting. Data for cuttings indicated that presence of the stem terminal combined with applied IBA positively influenced rooting through processes that increased basal stem fresh and dry weights before root emergence. Removal of the stem terminal influenced accumulation of net total carbohydrate in cuttings, but the major effect was on carbohydrate partitioning. Either type of IBA treatment after removal of the stem terminal usually resulted in different net carbohydrate concentrations in each tissue source of cuttings, compared with only removal of the terminal. Neither basal nor apical IBA treatment of cuttings without stem terminals yielded results for carbohydrate accumulation and partitioning like those obtained with intact cuttings. Removal of the stem terminal, even if followed by IBA treatment, may have lessened rooting potential of cuttings because it resulted in greater reducing sugarstarch concentration ratios in basal stems compared with those in intact cuttings.

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