Photothermal control of the imposition of summer dormancy in Poa bulbosa, a perennial grass geophyte

Micha Ofir*, Jaime Kigel

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

38 Scopus citations

Abstract

Poa bulbosa L., like many other Mediterranean geophytes, grows in the winter and enters a phase of summer dormancy in the spring. Summer dormancy enables these plants to survive the hot and dry summer. Long days are the main environmental factor active in the induction of summer dormancy in P. bulbosa and elevated temperatures accelerate dormancy development. P. bulbosa becomes dormant earlier than most other species that grow actively in the winter. Previous studies suggested that pre-exposure of P. bulbosa to short days and low temperatures during the autumn and early winter increased its sensitivity to photoperiodic induction in late winter, and thus enabled the early imposition of dormancy. To study this hypothesis, experiments were carried out under controlled photothermal conditions in the phytotron, under natural daylight extended with artificial lighting. The critical photoperiod for induction of summer dormancy at an optimal temperature (22/17°C day/night) was between 11 and 12 h. Photoperiods shorter than 12 h were noninductive, while 14- and 16-h days were fully inductive. A night break of 1 h of light given at the middle of the dark period of an 8-h photoperiod also resulted in full induction of dormancy. Pre-exposure to either low temperature (chilling at 5°C) or to short days of 8 h (SD) enhanced the inductive effect of subsequent 16-h long days (LD). The enhancing effect of chilling and SD increased with longer duration, i.e. fewer LDs were required to impose dormancy. However, the day-length during the low-temperature pretreatment had no effect on the level of induction at the following LD. Chilling followed by SD did not induce dormancy. The relevance of these responses to the development and survival of P. bulbosa in its natural habitat is discussed.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)633-640
Number of pages8
JournalPhysiologia Plantarum
Volume105
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 1999

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Photothermal control of the imposition of summer dormancy in Poa bulbosa, a perennial grass geophyte'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this