Abstract

Forcing makes possible to induce plant flowering independently of the season. In lilac, high temperature is the factor that breaks deep dormancy. The deepest dormancy occurs between the end of October and the end of December. Depending on the depth of dormancy, the starting temperatures required for forcing are 37°C in November, 31°C in December, and 25°C in January–March. Under natural conditions, the temperature inducing the inflorescence bud breaking is 6°C, whereas 9°C and 13°C or more allow inflorescence elongation and flowering, respectively (Kronenberg, 1994). In the present work, the effect of high temperature at the beginning of the forcing cycle on the structure of developing pollen grains of common lilac was investigated. Pollen grains from the outdoor-grown (control) shrubs showed no signs of degeneration. They were spherical, three-colpate to colporoidate, and bicellular, and contained large numbers of lipid bodies. High temperatures at the early forcing cycle (November) resulted in the degeneration of most microspores. The first signs of degeneration (cytoplasm plasmolysis) were observed at the tetrad stage and in mature anthers; the microspores consisted only of the outer and inner sporopolenin layers.

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