Abstract
Hydrangea macrophylla is a popular and commercially important flowering shrub, but frost injury of buds and current-year shoots is a common problem in some of its cultivars. As a result of climate warming, temperate winters are becoming progressively milder, and temperature patterns are becoming increasingly irregular with an increased frequency of warm spells. Warm spells may induce premature dehardening, increasing the risk of subsequent freezing injuries. This study investigated cold-hardiness of stems and buds of Hydrangea macrophylla ssp. macrophylla (Thunb.) Ser. ‘Alma’ during dehardening in response to simulated warm spells and subsequent rehardening in January and early March. Plants were acclimated in the field and dehardened in the greenhouse at controlled warm temperatures for various durations. Dehardened plants were rehardened for up to 12 days in an unheated greenhouse (January) or in the field (March). Buds of H. macrophylla were slightly less cold-hardy than stems. In both stems and buds, the dehardening resistance and the rate of dehardening were influenced by temperature, but buds appeared to be less resistant to dehardening and dehardened faster than stems. In stems, dehardening proceeded faster in March than in January, and the capacity of the stems to reharden seemed reduced, indicating that both dehardening and rehardening were influenced by the progression of winter. Results of this study indicate that buds of H. macrophylla are more sensitive to frost injury than stems and the vulnerability of stems to frost injuries, caused by an unstable temperature regime, changes during the winter season.
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