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Phenotypic plasticity to altered apical bud temperature in Cucumis sativus : more leaves‐smaller leaves and vice versa
Author(s) -
Savvides Andreas,
Ieperen Wim,
Dieleman Janneke A.,
Marcelis Leo F.M.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
plant, cell and environment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.646
H-Index - 200
eISSN - 1365-3040
pISSN - 0140-7791
DOI - 10.1111/pce.12835
Subject(s) - cucumis , biology , apical dominance , botany , shoot , bud , horticulture , air temperature , climatology , geology
Many studies investigated temperature effects on leaf initiation and expansion by relating these processes to air temperature or the temperature of a specific organ (e.g. leaf temperature). In reality plant temperature is hardly ever equal to air temperature or spatially uniform. Apical bud temperature ( T bud ), for example, may greatly differ from the temperature of the rest of the plant ( T plant ) dependent on the environment. Recent research in Cucumis sativus showed that T bud influences leaf initiation independent of T plant . These findings trigger the question if such spatial temperature differences also influence leaf expansion and plant phenotype. In a 28 day study, we maintained temperature differences between T bud and T plant ranging from −7 to +8 °C using a custom‐made bud temperature control system. Leaf expansion did not only depend on leaf temperature but also on the difference between bud and leaf temperature. Differences between T bud and T plant considerably influenced vertical leaf area distribution over the shoot: increasing T bud beyond T plant resulted in more and smaller leaves, while decreasing T bud below T plant resulted in less and larger leaves. The trade‐off between leaf number and leaf area resulted in phenotypic alterations that cannot be predicted, for example, by crop models, when assuming plant temperature uniformity.

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