Kinetics of upward bending response of gravistimulated snapdragon
shoots
Conclusions
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- In flowering shoots of the dicot, snapdragon, the locus of
graviperception continously shifts upwards during shoot elongation.
- When shoots of this plant respond to gravistimulation, the initial
response is rapid during the first 8 hours (phase 1), resulting in an
overshoot beyond 90o curvature by as much as 60o.
Subsequently, the return curvature response back to a vertical position is
much slower, taking as long as 50 hours (phase 2).
- In gravistimulated preflowering snapdragon shoots, the initial
curvature is downwards for ca. 50 minutes, followed by continous upward
bending. This initial downward curvature response is due to the weight of
the shoots.
- In contrast, in preflowering shoots of cereal grasses (monocots) such
as oats, the locus of gravitropic curvature is localized to discrete
regions called leaf sheath pulvini (swollen joints along the stem
where leaves are attached). In intact oat shoots, as many as 2 or 3
leaf-sheat pulvini may be involved in reorientation of lodged shoots to a
vertical position.
- In gravistimulated oat shoot stem segments (with a single leaf-sheath
pulvinus present), there is no initial downward curvature. Upward
curvature begins within 30 to 60 minutes and continues for ca. 60 hours,
reaching an ultimate angle of 50 to 60o.