Full TGIF Record # 63741
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Web URL(s):http://www.jstor.org/stable/2430846
    Last checked: 12/18/2015
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Publication Type:
i
Refereed
Author(s):Palmer, J. H.
Author Affiliation:Department of Botany, University College of the West Indies, Jamaica, British West Indies
Title:Studies in the behaviour of the rhizome of Agropyron Repens (L.) beauv.: I. The seasonal development and growth of the parent plant and rhizome.
Source:New Phytologist. Vol. 57, 1958, p. 145-159.
Publishing Information:Oxford, England: Cambridge University Press.
# of Pages:15
Keywords:TIC Keywords: Elymus repens; Rhizomes; Growth habit; Environmental factors; Growth; Weed profile; Seasonal variation; Internodes; Internode length; Internode characteristics; Plant anatomy; Leaf blade length; Buds; Tillers (vegetative); Identification; Flowering; Shoots; Temperatures; Photoperiod; Light; Rhizome growth
Abstract/Contents:"The mode of growth of the rhizomatous grass Agropyron repens (Couch Grass) is described. The plant produces new rhizomes in the spring from basal lateral buds. The tip of each rhizome grows in a horizontal direction below the soil surface during the spring and summer before erecting in the autumn to form a primary aerial shoot. This shoot develops into a mature plant during the following year. By sampling a mature stand of Agropyron plants it is shown that the development of the primary shoot is marked by the production of a succession of leaves, internodes and lateral shoots which vary in length or form according to a well-defined pattern. Usually 7 lateral buds at the base of the primary shoot grow out in the spring to form lateral shoots. Of these, the four most basal ones develop into rhizomes and the remainder into tillers. Plants growing in open communities develop differently in that secondary tillers and rhizomes are formed during the first growing season. Rhizome growth is not related to flower formation. From experiments it is found that: Rhizome growth can be induced during the winter under warm greenhouse conditions by increasing the intensity of illumination of the plants to within the range 500-2000 ft. candles. No rhizome growth occurs under natural conditions when the illumination intensity is reduced to approximately 3 per cent of the noon summer value. When rhizome growth is induced to begin aproximately 4 weeks prematurely, then rhizome growth ceases in Mid-July. These results are discussed. It is concluded that rhizome growth is dependent upon the plant being brightly illuminated and that rhizome initiation in the spring is controlled by environmental factors, while rhizome cessation among plants in closed communities is most probably the result of the parent aerial shoots becoming senescent. The problem of the orientation of the rhizome and its depth adjustment in the soil will be considered in a later paper. The work described here was carried out in the University of Sheffield, England. The author is indebted to Professor A. R. Clapham for much invaluable advice and criticism. Grateful acknowledgement is made to the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research for a maintenance allowance which made this investigation possible. Interest in rhizome physiology has centred mainly around the problems of rhizome orientation and depth adjustment in the soil (Bennet-Clark and Ball, 1951; Clapham, 1945). Hitherto little attention has been paid to the physiology of rhizome development, though there are numerous descriptive accounts of the seasonal development of rhizomes (Raunkiaer, 1907; Watt, 1940; Ovington, 1953). In this first paper physiological aspects of the development of the rhizome of Agropyron repens (L.) Beauv. are described. Although the physiology of the rhizome of this plant has not apparently been investigated previously, the growth and development of the plant has been briefly described by Sharman (1947), while the rhizomes has been subjected to extensive chemical investigation (Wehmer, 1929). Agropyron repens, commonly known as Couch or Quack grass, is found as a common perennial weed in countries of temperate climate. It occurs particularly in open waste places of sunny aspect. The plant is notorious for the rapidity with which it spreads vegetatively and for the tenacity with which it persists in the soil once it has become established. These noxious qualities are principally due to the tough rhizomes which are produced and which readily form new plants. The way in which Agropyron can successfully compete with other weeds in invading arable land, may in part be due to the secretion of toxic substances by the rhizome (Osvald, 1947)."
Language:English
References:14
Note:Figures
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ASA/CSSA/SSSA Citation (Crop Science-Like - may be incomplete):
Palmer, J. H. 1958. Studies in the behaviour of the rhizome of Agropyron Repens (L.) beauv.: I. The seasonal development and growth of the parent plant and rhizome.. New Phytol. 57:p. 145-159.
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http://www.jstor.org/stable/2430846
    Last checked: 12/18/2015
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    Access conditions: Item is within a limited-access website
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