Doctor of Philosophy, The Ohio State University, 2016, Horticulture and Crop Science
Seedling development is a period of dynamic change within the overall vegetable plant and crop development period. For example, leaf area, stem length, and above-ground biomass can increase several fold within 1-3 weeks of emergence, possibly signaling high rates of carbon fixation on a per gram fresh weight basis and prescribed patterns of primary growth. Still, while general patterns of seedling development are familiar and the influence of individual major environmental factors on it are well chronicled, a reliable, accessible, and highly repeatable approach to describe the efficiency with which seedlings convert growth factors into biomass and partition it is unavailable. We hypothesized that plant and environmental data could be integrated into a single “seedling vigor” value allowing for more direct and consistent comparisons of seedling growth within and across experiments. We tested this hypothesis in a greenhouse experiment involving the simultaneous tracking of seven parameters of seedling growth (above-ground biomass and growth pattern) in twenty-three commercial tomato varieties and four environmental variables through 18 d after seeding. A formula created for the test used the plant and environmental data in calculating seedling vigor values and the experiment was repeated twice over a four-month period in the spring. Minimum and maximum seedling vigor values differed 79- to 575-fold among cultivars in runs 1 and 2, respectively, although relative variety vigor values were generally consistent between runs. These results demonstrate: 1) that varieties differ in their primary growth capacities under identical growing conditions and 2) that calculations of vigor like the one demonstrated here can reliably differentiate these capacities and help standardize reports including them.
Normal seedling development, perhaps especially root-shoot communication and root and shoot level (carbon) partitioning, is severely disrupted in the process of grafting. In f (open full item for complete abstract)
Committee: Matt Kleinhenz (Advisor)
Subjects: Horticulture