Abstract

Mortality of tillers in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) is an important developmental event affecting spike number and yield potential of the crop. It has traditionally been thought that increased shading of young tillers by the developing canopy initiates the premature senescence of tillers. A series of field experiments were conducted in 1982, 1983, and 1984 at St. Paul, MN on a Waukegan silt loam soil (fine‐silty over sandy or sandy skeletal, mixed, Typic Hapludoll) to test this hypothesis. Degree of shading within the crop canopy was measured in relation to the position of tiller leaves during the vegetative phase of development for three genotypes. The decline in rate of leaf appearance on nonsurviving primary tillers, monitored as an early indicator of tiller senescence, was noted within 3 to 4 wk after crop emergence and before appreciable shading of tillers occurred. This indicates that tiller mortality was not initiated by lack of light. However, after main stem elongation began, tillers soon became heavily shaded suggesting the possibility that shading plays an auxiliary role in the senescence of barley tillers. We discuss the possibility that changes in light quality early in the growing season may be important for initiating the senescence of tillers.

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