Abstract

We designed field experiments using solar‐tracking Ranunculus adoneus flowers to determine where photoreception occurred, which organs responded, and how movement was achieved. Flower peduncles bend eastward in the morning and gradually unbend over the course of the day. Peduncles were found to bend significantly more frequently in the middle region near the floral bracts, 1–3 cm below the flower, than elsewhere on the peduncle. Because the peduncle tip continued to track the sun even after the flower itself was removed, our experiments concentrated on shielding (or conversely, exposing) various portions of peduncles from (or to) sunlight. Photoreception occurred primarily in the portion of the stem just beneath the floral receptacle. By following the position of landmarks applied to the stem, we found that 40% more growth occurred on the shaded side of bent peduncles, compared to the sunlit side. In contrast, top‐shielded peduncles did not solar track well and grew only 25% more on the shaded side than on the sunlit side. This growth differential corresponded to differences in cell length on the two sides of bent peduncles, with significantly longer epidermal cells occurring on the shaded side than on the sunlit side.

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