Increasing the Nighttime Lighting Duration Can Hasten Flowering of Long-day Plants

Autor: Qingwu Meng, Thomas J. Kramer
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2024
Předmět:
Zdroj: HortScience, Vol 59, Iss 12 (2024)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 2327-9834
DOI: 10.21273/HORTSCI18175-24
Popis: Low-intensity (≈2 μmol·m−2·s−1) photoperiodic lighting is often delivered at night to promote flowering of long-day greenhouse ornamentals when natural daylengths are short. An intermediate far-red (FR) fraction [percentage of FR light in red (R) + FR light] is necessary for the most rapid flowering in some crops, including snapdragon (Antirrhinum majus) and petunia (Petunia ×hybrida), compared with a low FR fraction. Specialty light-emitting diodes (LEDs) that include R+FR light with an intermediate FR fraction are effective at floral promotion but cost-prohibitive, whereas common warm-white (WW) LEDs with a low FR fraction can delay flowering. Because the duration to saturate flowering is longer than currently used (e.g., 4 to 8 hours) for some long-day plants, we conducted a replicated greenhouse experiment to determine how the WW or R+FR LED lighting duration influenced flowering. We grew snapdragon ‘Liberty Classic Yellow’, petunia ‘Easy Wave Burgundy Star’, and petunia ‘Wave Purple Improved’ under truncated 8-h natural short days with or without WW or R+FR (1:1) LEDs operating for 0, 4, 8, 12, or 16 hours in the middle of each night throughout the experiment. Snapdragon flowered 13 to 16 days earlier (21% to 28% earlier) under R+FR LEDs than under WW LEDs regardless of the lighting duration. Increasing the lighting duration from 0 to 16 hours decreased flowering time by up to 16 days and decreased plant height and leaf number at flowering under R+FR LEDs but not under WW LEDs. For petunia ‘Easy Wave Burgundy Star’, although WW LEDs delayed flowering by 6 to 13 days but promoted lateral branching compared with R+FR LEDs, the gap in flowering time narrowed as the lighting duration increased from 4 to 16 hours. Increasing the lighting duration improved the efficacy of WW LEDs but not R+FR LEDs. Flowering of petunia ‘Wave Purple Improved’ was unaffected as the lighting duration increased from 4 to 16 hours regardless of the lamp type and was delayed by 6 to 10 days under WW LEDs than under R+FR LEDs. For both petunia cultivars, flowering time was similar under 16-hour WW LEDs and 4-hour R+FR LEDs. In conclusion, increasing the nighttime lighting duration increased the efficacy of WW LEDs at promoting flowering of petunia and increased the efficacy of R+FR LED lamps at promoting flowering of snapdragon. Delivering WW LEDs all night long can minimize flowering delay in petunia compared with R+FR LEDs. In contrast, an intermediate FR fraction was indispensable to promote flowering of snapdragon, for which WW LEDs were ineffective.
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