Abstract

SUMMARYFourteen cultivars of north temperate, Australian, Mexican and Rhodesian origins, were grown in eight treatments: 2‐day‐lengths (10 h and 14h) × two temperature regimes (18/13 °C and 25/20 °C) × two seed vernalization treatments (unvernalized and 28 days at 1–2 °C). Numbers of days to 50 % ear emergence, leaf numbers and spikelet numbers of the main shoots were recorded.The north temperate cultivars were the most sensitive to daylength: in long days their mean spikelet number was 15 and they headed in 40–50 days, while in short days they had a mean of 24 spikelets and failed to head in 100 days. The Rhodesian cultivars were the least sensitive, but nevertheless headed 20–30 days earlier and had three to five fewer spikelets per ear in long days.The effects of vernalization on the tropical cultivars were related to maturity class: they ranged from negligible in early cultivars such as Sonora 64 and Devuli to decreases of 20 days to heading and seven spikelets in late cultivars such as Mexico 120 and Cajeme 71 in long days.The effects of temperature varied with cultivar and with vernalization treatment. Early cultivars and vernalized late cultivars headed earlier and had fewer spikelets in the warmer regimes while unvernalized late cultivars tended to have more spikelets and headed later. It is suggested that some vernalization of these late cultivars took place in the cooler regime.The significance of the results for the understanding of the physiological basis of the adaptation of wheat cultivars to different climatic zones is discussed.

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