Abstract
Photoperiodic responses of seedlings of long-day plantBrassica campestris L. cv. Ceres were investigated at different ages and varying length of inductive period. It was found that photoperiodie response increased with age. All plants flowered after one inductive cycle beginning with a light-period of 16h, but remained in the vegetative phase when kept under short-days (16h darkness, 8h light). Both auxins (IAA and NAA) and cytokinins (kinetin and benzyladenine) inhibited flowering when applied to the plumule or via the roots immediately before the inductive photoperiod. This inhibitory effects was confined to bud formation, whereas the rate of leaf initiation remained mostly unchanged. Only high concentrations of growth substances also affected the growth of roots and leaves. These results agree, in general, with the effects of growth substances in the short-day plantChenopodium rubrum.
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