Publication | Open Access
Responses of Native Australian Cut Flowers to Treatment with 1-Methylcyclopropene and Ethylene
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Citations
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References
2000
Year
BiologyApplied Plant EcologyEngineeringBotanyNatural SciencesCrop ProtectionPlant ProtectionEthylene TreatmentPostharvest LongevityPest ManagementCut FlowersPost-harvest PhysiologyPlant Physiology
Postharvest longevity of some cut flowers is shortened by exposure to ethylene gas. Adverse effects of ethylene may be prevented by treatment with 1-methylcyclopropene (1-MCP) gas. Responses of 14 different native Australian cut flowers to 1-MCP and ethylene applied at concentrations of 10 nL·L -1 and 10 μL·L -1 , respectively, were examined. Each gas was applied alone for 12 hours at 20 °C and they were also applied in series. Vase lives of Ceratopetalum gummiferum , Chamelaucium uncinatum , Grevillea `Kay Williams' and `Misty Pink', Leptospermum petersonii , Telopea `Shady Lady', and Verticordia nitens were reduced by ethylene treatment. Treatment with 1-MCP generally protected these cut flowers against subsequent exposure to ethylene. The 1-MCP treatment usually did not extend their vase lives in the absence of exogenous ethylene.
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