Abstract

SummaryEffects of total irradiance on growth and flowering were studied in cineraria cv. Cindy Blue grown under warm (mean 21°C) glasshouse conditions. Efficiency of light conversion for leaf and shoot dry weight increase were reduced from 0.08 to 0.02 as the mean daily light integral increased from 0.9 to 4.4 MJ m‐2 day‐1 but no significant difference in leaf area were associated with this. Specific leaf area decreased exponentially from 0.07 to 0.02 m2g1 over the cumulative irradiance range 23 to 127 MJ m‐2 after the start of treatments and thereafter remained stable. A light integral of 19.2 MJ m‐2 were required for initiation of one leaf in plants grown under a daily integral of 4.4 MJ m‐2 day‐1, as compared with only 5.1 MJ m‐2day‐1 required per leaf in plants grown at less than 0.9 MJ m‐2day‐1. Neither chronological duration of juvenile development nor leaf number below the flower was affected by irradiance. However, as the rate of leaf initiation increased with irradiance up to 2.4 MJ m‐2day‐1 so the rate of progress to flower visibility increased linearly with irradiance over the same range. This rate then remained constant from 2.4 to 4.4 MJ m‐2day‐1. Length of the main flowering shoot decreased and the number of flowering shoots increased as irradiance increased from 0.9 to 2.4 MJ m‐2 day‐1 and then remained unchanged by further increases in irradiance.

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