Optimized differential thermal analysis sheds light on the effect of temperature on peach floral bud cold hardiness and transition from endo- to ecodormancy.

Plant Sci

Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, United States. Electronic address:

Published: October 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The main threat to profitable peach production is cold damage to flower buds, making it crucial to accurately assess their cold hardiness.
  • Differential thermal analysis (DTA) is a key method used to measure the cold hardiness of peach floral buds and monitor their resilience during the dormant season, validating results through standard methods and real field conditions.
  • Findings show rapid cold acclimation in 'Redhaven' peaches and highlight a significant decrease in cold hardiness with the arrival of warmer temperatures in spring, suggesting that temperature shifts play a critical role in the maturity of peach buds transitioning from dormancy to growth.

Article Abstract

The greatest threat to profitable peach production is cold damage to reproductive tissues. To better understand and mitigate cold damage in peach accurate and efficient assessment of floral bud cold hardiness (H) is critical. Differential thermal analysis (DTA) was optimized for efficient and precise detection of low-temperature exotherms (LTE) created by the freezing of supercooled intracellular water in peach floral primordia to determine H weekly during the dormant season. DTA-estimated lethal temperatures (LT) were validated against the standard oxidative browning method (OB) and in situ field damage following three freezing events. Chilling (0-7.2 °C) accumulation tracked throughout the dormant season to determine DTA-related changes across dormancy phase transitions. LTEs showed rapid acclimation of 'Redhaven' peach floral buds following the first frost of the dormant season (T=-6.8 °C on November 18, 2016) and maintained similar H levels for 45 days through maximum H (LT =-23.9 °C recorded on January 9, 2017) and until the accumulation of 868 chilling hours was reached. Following this milestone, a significant 55% loss of LTEs upon the accumulation of the first growing degree day (T=7 °C) was recoded on February 7, 2017. An LTE recovery approach, pre-exposing buds to a non-freezing low temperature (-2°C) for a period of 12 h, more than doubled the number of LTEs detected for another 27 days extending DTA use for LT prediction. The results presented herein confirm that the use of DTA is efficient and accurate to determine H in peach floral buds, and suggest that the LTE loss in early spring may be a signature response related to the shift from endo- into ecodormancy following two environmental temperature cues, chilling satisfaction and the first heat accumulation post chilling satisfaction.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.plantsci.2023.111791DOI Listing

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