Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Flowers nitrogen levels

Seed quality depends heavily on the climatic characteristics of site locations. Thus, in order to limit seedbome disease inocula, seed production should be in areas characterized by low rainfall during flowering and ripening stages and by soils with low soil-nitrogen levels. [Pg.379]

Floral initiation is best studied at the microscopic level. The fact is, floral initiation often occurs and is unrecorded because abortion takes place or there is failure of the flower initials to develop to the macroscopic level where detection is easy with the unaided eye. There are many pieces of evidence that this is true. One was provided by Naylor (1941) with the photoperiodically sensitive cocklebur plant (Xanthium pennsylvanicum). He found that even when the plants were severely deficient in nitrogen or phosphorus or potassium they differentiated floral primordia after the leaves received an appropriate photoperiodic treatment. However, floral development did not occur. If dissection of stem apices had not been carried out, floral initiation would have gone undetected and the plants would have been recorded as vegetative. [Pg.188]

While low irradiance levels often limit the number of flowers developed, duration of the light period perhaps more frequently dominates in the floral development phase. In any event, an unsuitable carbohydrate nitrogen balance under either long or short photoperiods can limit the number of flowers that reach the pollination stage of development. [Pg.193]


See other pages where Flowers nitrogen levels is mentioned: [Pg.193]    [Pg.368]    [Pg.64]    [Pg.658]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.290]    [Pg.1130]    [Pg.410]    [Pg.75]    [Pg.98]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.147]    [Pg.70]    [Pg.886]    [Pg.188]    [Pg.193]    [Pg.194]    [Pg.48]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.193 ]




SEARCH



Flowers

© 2024 chempedia.info