Abstract

Rate of extension growth, as measured by height, of 2-month-old ‘Valencia’ orange trees (Citrus sinensis (L.) Osbeck) on rough lemon rootstock (C. limon Burm. f.) was reduced to 0.5 mm from 5.0 mm day−1 with 0.1% (w/v) sprays of the growth retardant AMO-1618 (4 hydroxy-5-isopropyl-2-methyl phenyl trimethyl-ammonium chloride, 1 piperdine carboxylate) every 2 weeks during 11 weeks under natural daylight in a glasshouse. Trees sprayed with AMO-1618 were 10-fold shorter, more compact in appearance, and leaves were greener and more oval shaped than those on untreated trees. There was no ‘chemical burn’. AMO-1618-sprayed trees were more cold hardy than untreated trees during controlled-temperature, cold-hardening regimes. Alone, AMO-1618 had no effect on freeze tolerance at -5.5° C. AMO-1618 also was associated with greater tree tolerance to freeze injury determined by O2 uptake in ‘Valencia’ leaves to as low as -6.7° C.

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