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JXB Advance Access originally published online on July 28, 2003
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Journal of Experimental Botany, Vol. 54, No. 390, pp. 2091-2104, September 1, 2003
© 2003 Oxford University Press

Relationships among shoot sinks for resources exported from nodal roots regulate branch development of distal non-rooted portions of Trifolium repens L.

Received 20 February 2003; Accepted 23 May 2003

R. G. Thomas, M. J. M. Hay*, and P. C. D. Newton

AgResearch Grasslands, Private Bag 11008, Palmerston North, New Zealand

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. Fax: +64 6 3518 138. E-mail: mike.hay{at}agresearch.co.nz

Two manipulative experiments tested hypotheses pertaining to the correlative control exerted by nodal roots on branch development of the distal non-rooted portion of Trifolium repens growing clonally under near-optimal conditions. The two experiments, differing in their pattern of excision to manipulate the number of branches formed at the first 9–10 phytomers distal to the youngest nodal root, each found that after 20 phytomers of growth the total number of lateral branches formed on the primary stolon remained between five and seven regardless of where the branches formed along the stolon. Additional treatments established that nodal roots influenced branch development via relationships among shoot sinks for the root-supplied resources rather than through variation in the supply of such resources induced by fluctuations in photosynthate supply to roots from branches. Regression analysis of data pooled from treatments of both experiments confirmed that shoot-sink relationships for root- supplied resources controlled the branching processes on the non-rooted portion of plants. A disbudding treatment, which removed all the apical and axillary buds present on basal branches, but left other branch tissues intact, increased branch development of the apical region in the same way as did complete excision of the basal lateral branches. The apical buds and the elongation processes occurring immediately proximal to the buds were thus identified as strong sinks for the root-supplied resources. Such results suggest that branch development on the non-rooted shoot portion distal to the youngest nodal root is regulated by competition among sinks for root-derived resources, of limited availability, necessary for the processes of elongation of axillary buds and the primary stolon apical bud.

Key words: Axillary bud outgrowth, branch development, clonal growth, correlative control, nodal roots, Trifolium repens.


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