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Frost hardiness gradients in shoots and roots of<i>picea mariana</i>seedlings

51

Citations

13

References

1995

Year

Abstract

Frost hardiness of tissues along the length of the stem and the root was investigated in first‐year black spruce (Picea mariana (Mill.) B.S.P.) seedlings. Frost hardiness of 1 cm long stem and root segments was evaluated based on Index of Injury, calculated from post‐freezing electrolyte leakage. Frost hardiness was tested approximately weekly beginning seven weeks after seedlings were transferred from an 18 to a 10 h photoperiod, both at day/night temperatures of 26°C/16°C. Trees were transferred to temperatures of 10°C day and 5°C night at a 10 h photoperiod after a further 18 days. Frost hardiness was greater at the terminal bud and least at the root tips. Although shoots were generally more frost hardy than roots, differences in hardiness along the stem and root axes were gradual, rather than abruptly differing at the shoot‐root interface. All tissues, including root tips, increased in frost hardiness after conditioning for 18 days under short photoperiods (10 h) and warm temperatures (26ˆC/16°C, day/night). Under cold temperatures (10°C/5°C, day/night) all tissues, excepting the root tips, tolerated — 16°C with little subsequent electrolyte leakage.

References

YearCitations

1970

798

1967

311

1990

144

1985

77

1993

69

1992

56

1990

52

1993

45

1977

28

1970

26

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