Abstract

AbstractThe negative impact of enhanced ultraviolet‐B (UV‐B) radiation has been demonstrated for rice, but few studies have examined the effects of low UV‐B radiation on rice growth and physiology. The objective of this study was to determine the effects of low UV‐B radiation on rice physiology with special emphasis on tiller initiation and development in two popular US rice cultivars, ‘Cocodrie’ and ‘Clearfield 161 (CL161)’. Plants received no natural UV‐B radiation because of the UV‐absorption characteristics of the greenhouse glass, hence UV‐B was artificially supplied by supplemental UV‐B lighting. Plants were grown in soil collected from research plots, and were exposed to UV‐B radiation of 0, 4 (sub‐ambient) or 8 kJ m−2 day−1 (ambient) for 29 days in one experiment and 87 days in a second experiment. ‘Cocodrie’ had no differential response among 0, 4 and 8 kJ m−2 day−1 UV‐B treatments for all the parameters measured except for plant height, which showed 5% decrease at ambient UV‐B conditions. For ‘CL161’ sub‐ambient UV‐B radiation exposure decreased vegetative tiller production (25%) and total panicle dry weight (15%). The decrease in tiller production was not due to a decrease in carbohydrate content or increase in auxin content under the low UV‐B radiation.

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