Abstract

Effects of temperature and duration of bulb storage on leaf emergence of scale bulblets and on the type of plant development were investigated in Lilium longiflorum ‘White American’. After the parent bulbs had been stored for 0, 5, 10 or 15 weeks at 30, 20, 10, or 0°C, scales collected from different parts of a bulb were scale-propagated at 25 or 14°C, or under the temperature regimes normally used in The Netherlands. Independently of the scale position, a higher storage temperature promoted leaf emergence from scale bulblets, whereas a lower temperature delayed it. Higher storage temperatures produced more epigeous type plants, especially from outer and middle scales. Sprouting of the parent bulb had no effect on leaf emergence from the scale bulblets nor on the type of plant development.

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