PHOTOPERIOD IN XANTHIUM POPULATIONS FROM TEXAS AND MEXICO
- 1 August 1970
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Botany
- Vol. 57 (7) , 881-888
- https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1537-2197.1970.tb09886.x
Abstract
Photoperiodic responses of Xanthium strumarium L. originating between 19° N in Mexico and 34° N in Texas varied among seedlings grown from seed under controlled conditions. The critical night lengths form a gradient from 9.5 hr in northern Texas to 10.75 hr in southern Texas and northeastern Mexico. Populations with critical night lengths of 9.5 and 9.75 hr showed a longer interval to flower bud formation under cooler temperatures (24 C day/15 C night) than under warmer temperatures (30 C day/24 C night). Three of four populations with a 10.75‐hr critical night length showed a shorter interval under the cooler temperature regime. Although the Texas populations demonstrate a strong correlation of photoperiodic response with latitude, the Mexico populations show diverse photoperiodic timing from approximately the same latitude. The study emphasizes that a combination of critical night length and ripeness‐to‐flower (maturity) response forms the basis for reproductive adaptation in different climatic regimes in Texas and Mexico.Funding Information
- National Science Foundation (GB‐6097)
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Photoperiod in Three Xanthium Populations from the Tropic of Cancer in MexicoScience, 1969
- PHOTOPERIODIC ADAPTATION TO LATITUDE IN XANTHIUM STRUMARIUMAmerican Journal of Botany, 1966
- Requirements for Floral Initiation of Los Angeles XanthiumScience, 1959
- BIOSYSTEMATIC STUDIES ON XANTHIUM: TAXONOMIC APPRAISAL AND ECOLOGICAL STATUSCanadian Journal of Botany, 1959
- Climatic Atlas of the United StatesPublished by Harvard University Press ,1954