Abstract

Tillering responses to light quality in different phenological stages of a perennial warm-season grass Eragrostis curvula were investigated in controlled environments. In vegetative plants, the tillering rate was greater ( P<0.01) in the high (1.1–1.3) than in the low (0.59–0.70) red:far-red ratio (R/FR) light regime. Tillering rates were higher in the low R/FR treatment when the plants in the high R/FR regime reached the reproductive stage, while the plants in the low R/FR regime remained vegetative. After the reproductive tillers were removed by defoliation, more tillers were produced in the defoliated plants grown in the high R/FR regime. When the plants in both light treatments entered the reproductive stage, the tillering rate under the two light regimes became similar, suggesting a significant interaction between tillering and inflorescence development. The more advanced inflorescence development in the high R/FR regime may have reduced assimilate availability to tiller growth and overshadowed the effect of high R/FR on tillering. Both tillering and inflorescence development appeared to be controlled by R/FR ratio. The higher rate of aerial tiller production on the reproductive culms during the post-anthesis period in the high R/FR regime suggested that high R/FR ratio stimulated not only basal tillering, but also aerial tillering.

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