Abstract

Abstract Field observations suggest high air temperatures during bloom decrease fruit set of many sweet cherry (Prunus avium L.) cultivars. We investigated the role of temperature on stigma receptivity and ovule viability in four sweet cherry cultivars that exhibit variability in productivity and fertility: ‘Sweetheart’ (self-fertile, high productivity), ‘Benton’ (self-fertile, low productivity), ‘Rainier’ (self-sterile, high productivity), and ‘Tieton’ (self-sterile, low productivity). The development of the stigmatic surface, and pollen hydration, germination and tube growth in vivo, were evaluated by hand pollination and used as proxies for stigma receptivity. In addition, the senescence of primary and secondary ovules was analyzed with fluorescence microscopy. The stigmatic papillae began deteriorating by the second day after anthesis and had collapsed by the sixth day post-anthesis across cultivars. Pollen hydration exhibited 5 stages related to the length-width ratios of 2.5:1, 2:1, 1.75:1, 1.5:1 to 1:1. Maximum pollen hydration and pollen germination occurred on the stigmas within 2 days of bloom, depending on cultivar and air temperature. Pollen hydration and germination, and ovule senescence accelerated under warmer temperatures. At 7 days post-anthesis and under 24 °C approximately 80% of ‘Rainier’ ovules were viable compared to 30% in the three other cultivars. Under moderate temperature (18 °C) which mimicked the field average flowering temperature, ovule of the two high productivity cherry cultivars, ‘Rainier’ and ‘Sweetheart’, kept full viabilities for 3–4 days post-anthesis while only 1 day for the two low productivity cultivars ‘Benton’ and ‘Tieton’. These results reveal that low commercial productivity of sweet cherry cultivars in the Pacific Northwest (PNW) of U.S. is likely due to rapid ovule senescence, a condition exacerbated in warm conditions.

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