AI Article Synopsis

  • Spring frosts, worsened by climate change, pose a significant risk to fruit production, prompting research into plant growth regulators (PGRs) like ethephon as a potential solution.
  • Ethephon effectively delays bloom timing in peach trees, with its positive effects on bud physiology, such as increased cold hardiness and extended chilling accumulation, being influenced by concentration and timing of application.
  • The study suggests that ethephon’s influence on bud dormancy involves hormonal changes, particularly through jasmonic acid (JA), rather than the previously thought abscisic acid (ABA), opening new avenues for future research on fruit production resilience.

Article Abstract

Spring frosts exacerbated by global climate change have become a constant threat to temperate fruit production. Delaying the bloom date by plant growth regulators (PGRs) has been proposed as a practical frost avoidance strategy. Ethephon is an ethylene-releasing PGR found to delay bloom in several fruit species, yet its use is often coupled with harmful effects, limiting its applicability in commercial tree fruit production. Little information is available regarding the mechanisms by which ethephon influences blooming and bud dormancy. This study investigated the effects of fall-applied ethephon on bud phenology, cold hardiness, and hormonal balance throughout the bud dormancy cycle in peach. Our findings concluded that ethephon could alter several significant aspects of peach bud physiology, including accelerated leaf fall, extended chilling accumulation period, increased heat requirements, improved cold hardiness, and delayed bloom date. Ethephon effects on these traits were primarily dependent on its concentration and application timing, with a high concentration (500 ppm) and an early application timing (10% leaf fall) being the most effective. Endogenous ethylene levels were induced significantly in the buds when ethephon was applied at 10% versus 90% leaf fall, indicating that leaves are essential for ethephon uptake. The hormonal analysis of buds at regular intervals of chilling hours (CH) and growing degree hours (GDH) also indicated that ethephon might exert its effects through an abscisic acid (ABA)-independent way in dormant buds. Instead, our data signifies the role of jasmonic acid (JA) in mediating budburst and bloom in peach, which also appears to be influenced by ethephon treatment. Overall, this research presents a new perspective in interpreting horticultural traits in the light of biochemical and molecular data and sheds light on the potential role of JA in bud dormancy, which deserves further attention in future studies that aim at mitigating spring frosts.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8309013PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants10071266DOI Listing

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