Pratt, Charlotte, John Einset, and Mohammad Zahur. (N. Y. S. Agric. Expt. Sta., Geneva.) Radiation damage in apple shoot apices. Amer. Jour. Bot. 46(7): 537–544. Illus. 1959.—Pattern of shoot growth and anatomy of the shoot apex of ‘Golden Delicious’ apple trees on ‘East Malling IX’ rootstock are compared in normal trees and those growing under chronic gamma irradiation (average doses of 17–48 r per 20‐hr. day) at Brookhaven National Laboratory. Bud damage in 6 varieties of apple trees is compared. Irradiated ‘Golden Delicious’ formed lateral buds on the current year's shoot, but the following year these buds grew into spurs which failed to form a terminal bud (“budless” spurs) and enlarged to form “club tips” and “swollen spurs” in this and subsequent years. Cells with thick walls and lightly stained cytoplasm occurred in shoot apices of irradiated lateral buds in mid‐June. The first tunica layer was more resistant to radiation than the inner tunica layers and the corpus; pith rib meristem was still more resistant. Inflorescence and floral meristems were rarely found, but once formed, continued development. One‐year‐old budless spurs had a few leaves but neither an organized apical meristem nor leaf primordia. Surface of the apex was often folded. Periderm and, later, deep‐lying wound cambium developed. Expansion of pith, vascular tissue, cortex, wound cambium and periderm caused enlargement of club tips and swollen spurs. Many lateral buds from the gamma field which were propagated without irradiation in early August grew into long shoots with terminal buds. Scions removed from irradiation in November and inserted into normal trees showed lower survival and many of their shoots were budless. This suggests that the capacity for normal growth of a bud damaged by chronic irradiation is greater in mid‐summer than later in the year. With reference to percentage of budless shoots, ‘Delicious,’ ‘Golden Delicious’ and ‘McIntosh’ were more sensitive to an average dose of 24 r per day and lower doses than were ‘Cox,’ ‘Macoun’ and ‘Spy.’ Symptoms of radiation damage in apple buds during the first year were similar following acute or chronic irradiation. Degree of radiation damage, as expressed by death of apical meristems, was concluded to vary with stage of development of the bud, structure of the apical meristem, and genetic constitution.