Effect of photoperiod on apical growth cessation in tamarack (Larix laricina) and balsam poplar (Populus balsamifera) provenances from northern Ontario
Abstract
The effects of four photoperiods (i.e. 6, 10, 14, and 18 hours) on the rate of apical
growth cessation and apical bud primordia production were studied in controlled
environment experiments using tamarack {Larix laricina (Du Roi) K. Koch) seedlings and
rooted cuttings, and balsam poplar {Populus balsamifera L.) rooted cuttings from
provenances in northern Ontario. The objectives of this study were to investigate 1) the
effect of photoperiod on shoot growth and the rate of growth cessation among provenances
of tamarack and balsam poplar, 2) the variation in the rate of growth cessation between
species from northern Ontario, and 3) the effect of different photoperiods on apical bud
primordia production among tamarack provenances. First-year tamarack seedlings from
four provenances in northern Ontario, balsam poplar rooted cuttings from five provenances
ranging from Rhinelander, Wisconsin to Hudson Bay, and two-year old tamarack rooted
cuttings from five provenances in northern Ontario were tested. Tamarack provenances
displayed significant variation in the critical daylength for inducing growth cessation, but
did not vary in the rate of growth cessation. Tamarack seedlings produced twice as many
axial needle primordia in apical buds under a 10 hour photoperiod than a six hour
photoperiod. Balsam poplar displayed clinal variation in the critical daylength for inducing
growth cessation and in the rate of growth cessation. The variation in the rate of growth
cessation during short photoperiods was seen as an adaptation to an increasing rate of
change in daily photoperiod with increasing latitude.
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