Abstract
Abstract This investigation was conducted to determine the plant growth retardant type, application method, and rate required to produce a marketable greenhouse pot plant of Coreopsis verticillata L. ‘Moonbeam’. Pruned plants in 10 cm (4 in) pots received growth retardant treatments in two experiments consisting of one application of ancymidol or paclobutrazol medium drenches at 0, 2, 4, or 6 ppm; daminozide spray at 0, 2550, 5100, or 7650 ppm; paclobutrazol spray at 0, 12, 24, 36, 48, or 60 ppm; flurprimidol spray at 0, 25, 50, 75, 100, 150, or 200 ppm; or maleic hydrazide at 0, 360, 720, 1080, 1440, or 1800 ppm in the first experiment and sprays of daminozide at 0, 2550, 5100, or 7650 ppm; paclobutrazol at 0, 60, or 120 ppm; daminozide/paclobutrazol combinations at 0, 2550/16, 2550/32, 2550/48, or 2550/64 ppm, chloromequat at 0, 767, 1534, or 2301 ppm; or daminozide/chloromequat combinations at 0, 1275/1534, 2550/1534, 3825/1534, or 5100/1534 ppm in the second experiment. In the first experiment, there was a linear decrease in shoot height, growth index, and lateral shoot length with increasing rates of ancymidol and paclobutrazol drenches and flurprimidol sprays while daminozide decreased growth quadratically. There was a linear increase in shoot height and lateral shoot length with increasing rates of maleic hydrazide but no effect on growth index. Only daminozide and maleic hydrazide increased the number of days from treatment to flower with increasing rates. Quality ratings increased with increasing rates of ancymidol, daminozide, and flurprimidol with the highest ratings found at the two highest rates of daminozide and flurprimidol. Paclobutrazol spray did not affect the parameters measured. In the second experiment, chloromequat spray did not affect the parameters measured but when combined with increasing rates of daminozide, linearly decreased shoot height, growth index, and lateral shoot length while increasing the number of days to flower. Daminozide alone resulted in a quadratic change in growth index and lateral shoot length while linearly increasing the number of days to flower but with no effect on quality rating. The higher rates of paclobutrazol than were used in the first experiment decreased shoot height and lateral shoot length with no effect on growth index, the number of days to flower, or quality rating. Overall, the best quality ratings and the most compact plants resulted from spray applications of daminozide at 5100 ppm or 7650 ppm and flurprimidol at 150 ppm or 200 ppm, however flurprimidol is not currently registered for application to greenhouse crops but a newer product, Topflor, has the same active ingredient and greenhouse crop labeling.
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