Abstract
The effects of different hardening regimes were studied in E. viminalis by varying temperature, light
conditions and photoperiod. The role of root temperature in dehardening was investigated in E. grandis. The
relationship between leaf glaucousness and frost resistance was reexamined in E. urnigera and in crosses
between the glaucous frost-resistant species E. pulverulenta and the green. less-resistant species E. grandis.
These studies involved seedlings but adult material was also used when checking the association between
frost resistance and G, the growth regulator in E. grandis.
Provided that night temperatures were close to freezing, rapid hardening was independent of
photoperiod, light source and day/night temperature differentials. No significant relationship between level
of frost resistance and intensity of leaf glaucousness was observed in a segregating progeny of E. urnigera. In
F2 and backcross progenies between E. pulverulenta and E. grandis, no evidence was obtained for either
physiological or genetical links between glaucousness and frost resistance. As in several other Eucalyptus
species, low root temperatures delayed rapid dehardening in E. grandis.
Increased frost resistance towards the top of E. grandis seedlings was associated with marked ontogenetic
increases in G content. The G content of a 2 m sapling was highest in winter when maximum frost resistance
had developed. This and other supporting evidence suggests that G has a role in the frost resistance of E.
Grandis perhaps by affecting active electron transport properties of membranes. No information of this kind
is available for other Eucalyptus species.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
40 articles.
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