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Plug Source and Growth Retardants Affect Finish Size of Bedding Plants

12

Citations

7

References

2001

Year

Abstract

Eight bedding plant species were grown from plugs obtained from two sources. The plugs were transplanted into jumbo six packs and sprayed with a solution of chlormequat/daminozide with concentrations of 1000/800, 1250/1250, or 1500/5000 mg·L -1 when new growth was ≈5 cm in height or width. Three different species were grown in the fall ( Dianthus chinensis L., `Telstar Mix', Petunia × hybrida Hort. Vilm.-Andr., `Dreams Red', and Viola × wittrockiana Gams., `Bingo Blue'), winter [ Antirrhinum majus L., `Tahiti Mix', Matthiola incana (L.) R. Br., `Midget Red', and P. × hybrida, `Dreams Mix'], and spring [ Catharanthus roseus (L.) G. Don, `Cooler Pink', Salvia splendens F. Sellow ex Roem. & Schult., `Empire Red', and Begonia × semperflorens-cultorum Hort., `Cocktail Mix']. The treatments significantly reduced finished plant size of all species for each season. There was a significant difference in finish size between sources for Dianthus , Antirrhinum , Matthiola , Catharanthus , Salvia , and Begonia . The efficacy of chlormequat/daminozide also differed for each source of Dianthus , Matthiola, and Begonia , but the treatments minimized the differences in finish size between sources for Petunia and Viola . Chemical names used: (2-chlorethyl) trimethylammonium chloride (chlormequat); ( N -dimethylaminosuccinamic acid) (daminozide).

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