Abstract

I examined the effects of growth temperature and winter duration on the leaf phenology of Fauria crista-galli plants, which have an indeterminate growth habit. After a 220-day chilling treatment, the leaf expansion and green periods of plants maintained at 25/20°C were much longer than those of plants maintained at 15/10°C and of plants at the natural habitat obtained in a previous study. The results indicate that early growth cessation and early leaf senescence in the natural habitat are not only due to endogenous rhythm but determined to some extent by cool summer temperatures. When grown at 15/10°C, the green period of individual leaves and plants was much shorter after a long chilling treatment (220days) than after a short chilling treatment (110days). The plants sprouted during or immediately after the termination of chilling treatment, suggesting that the decrease in the green period results partly from an advance of endogenous developmental stages during the chilling treatment and that the timing of snowmelt potentially affects the time of leaf senescence in the natural habitat.

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