Abstract

AbstractChanges in endogenous growth regulators in gladiolus corms during dormancy were studied using paper and column chromatography followed by a bioassay with the test for straight growth of Avena coleoptile. Corms were grown in the field or in a glass room of a phytotron at 20°C in the light. Another lot was grown in a dark room at 20°C in the dark. Half of the daughter corms in each lot were cold‐treated for about one month and the other half were stored at room temperature after harvest. The earliest sprouting was seen in dark grown corms with cold treatment, and the latest sprouting in light grown corms without cold. This pattern was similar in each cultivar over a period of three years. Corms from both lots contained considerable amounts of inhibiting substance just after harvest. However, dark grown corms treated with cold showed a rapid decrease in inhibitor activity and an increase in promoter activity. On the other hand, in light grown corms without cold treatment there was inhibitor activity found consistently even after two months. —There appear to be two inhibiting zones in the chromato‐grams. One of these contains two inhibitory substances, one of which was assumed to be abscisic acid.

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