Abstract

Combinations of different light quality and fluence exposure times were investigated for their effects on in vitro growth of the woody plant Spiraea nipponica. An interaction was demonstrated between different levels of benzyladenine (BA) used for in vitro propagation and the specific light regimes investigated. This relationship was affected by the length of exposure to either white or red/FR light and the time of transfer from one fluence rate to another. In all instances exposure to red/FR light resulted in more extensive growth than under white light. Thus explants cultured under 0.25 and 0.4 mg l-1 of BA exhibited high shoot proliferation rates when transferred, after 4 weeks of low photon fluence red/FR light, to higher fluence white light for a further week. The proliferation rates obtained were higher than any white light treatment including that with the highest BA level of 0.5 mg l-1. In addition, the combination of red/FR light exposure with a white light stage of higher fluence improved proliferation at lower exogenous BA levels.

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