Respiratory Response, Ethylene Production, and Response to Ethylene of Citrus Fruit during Ontogeny
Open Access
- 1 March 1970
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant Physiology
- Vol. 45 (3) , 334-338
- https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.45.3.334
Abstract
The initial respiratory rates at 20 centrigrade of detached oranges (Valencia and navel), grapefruit, and lemons decreased during ontogeny. Small attached oranges respired at the same rate as detached fruits of the same weight, and cutting the pedicel produced no shock or injury stimulus to the respiratory rate. Small oranges and grapefruit (average weight about 15 grams) showed pseudoclimacteric respiratory patterns and produced ethylene. The height of the respiratory rise and the amount of ethylene produced decreased as the fruit increased in weight until the September 4th harvest, when the fruit weights were 120, 64, and 87 grams for grapefruit, Valencia, and navel oranges, respectively; at that time no respiratory rise or ethylene production was observed. The pattern for all subsequent harvest revealed no postharvest rise in the respiratory rates. Lemon fruit, in contrast, had a continuously decreasing respiratory rate at all stages of ontogeny. Exposure to 20 microliters of ethylene per liter induced an increase in the respiratory rate of all varieties at every stage of ontogeny; this was true also in young oranges and grapefruit following their respiratory rise and decline.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Respiration of Oranges and Grapefruits Harvested at Different Stages of DevelopmentPlant Physiology, 1968
- Photosynthesis & respiration in developing fruits . II. Comparative rates at various stages of developmentPlant Physiology, 1961
- Simple Method for Continuous Treatment of Plant Material with Metered Traces of Ethylene or Other GasesPlant Physiology, 1960
- Physiological Studies of Chilling Injury in Citrus FruitsPlant Physiology, 1960
- Citrus Fruit GraftingScience, 1957
- Respiration of Cucumber Fruits Associated with Physiological Injury at Chilling Temperatures.Plant Physiology, 1956
- RESPIRATORY ACTIVITY AND DURATION OF LIFE OF APPLES GATHERED AT DIFFERENT STAGES OF DEVELOPMENT AND SUBSEQUENTLY MAINTAINED AT A CONSTANT TEMPERATUREPlant Physiology, 1945
- THE RESPIRATORY METABOLISM OF McINTOSH APPLES DURING ONTOGENY, AS DETERMINED AT 22° CPlant Physiology, 1941
- EFFECT OF ETHYLENE ON CERTAIN CHEMICAL CHANGES ASSOCIATED WITH THE RIPENING OF PEARSPlant Physiology, 1939
- GROWTH STUDIES ON FRUITS. RESPIRATION OF TOMATO FRUITSPlant Physiology, 1929