نتایج جستجو برای: chilling

تعداد نتایج: 3353  

2013
Eike Luedeling Achim Kunz Michael M. Blanke

Most trees from temperate climates require the accumulation of winter chill and subsequent heat during their dormant phase to resume growth and initiate flowering in the following spring. Global warming could reduce chill and hence hamper the cultivation of high-chill species such as cherries. Yet determining chilling and heat requirements requires large-scale controlled-forcing experiments, an...

2016
Gulshan Kumar Usha Kumari Rattan Anil Kumar Singh Swarup Kumar Parida

Winter dormancy is a well known mechanism adopted by temperate plants, to mitigate the chilling temperature of winters. However, acquisition of sufficient chilling during winter dormancy ensures the normal phenological traits in subsequent growing period. Thus, low temperature appears to play crucial roles in growth and development of temperate plants. Apple, being an important temperate fruit ...

Journal: :Journal of plant physiology 2009
Vera Hershkovitz Haya Friedman Eliezer E Goldschmidt Oleg Feygenberg Edna Pesis

Chilling of avocado fruit (Persea americana cv. Arad) in the orchard caused a dramatic induction of fruit ripening and a parallel increase in ethylene biosynthesis and receptor genes' expression during shelf life. In-orchard chilling stress stimulated ethylene and CO(2) production already in fruit attached to the tree, and these reduced thereafter during 20 degrees C storage. In non-chilled con...

Journal: :Journal of plant physiology 2003
Paula Scotti Campos Virgínia Quartin José Cochicho Ramalho Maria Antonieta Nunes

Five Coffea genotypes differing in their sensitivity to low positive temperatures were compared with regard to the effects of chilling on membrane integrity, as well as their ability to recover from cold-induced injury upon re-warming. Membrane damage was evaluated through electrolyte leakage, changes in membrane lipid composition and malondialdehyde (MDA) production in control conditions (25/2...

Journal: :Plant physiology 1967
M N Christiansen

Cotton seedlings were subjected to a 96 hour chilling treatment (5 degrees or 10 degrees ) after periods of germination at 31 degrees ranging from 0 to 48 hours. Inhibition of subsequent growth at a favorable temperature by chilling was dependent on level of low temperature and stage of seedling development when chilled. Two periods of chilling hypersensitivity were observed during germination:...

Journal: :Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 2000
G A González-Aguilar J Fortiz R Cruz R Baez C Y Wang

Exposure of mango (Mangifera indica cv. Tommy Atkins) fruit to methyl jasmonate (MJ) vapors (10(-)(4) M) for 24 h at 25 degrees C reduced chilling injury during subsequent storage for 21 days at 7 degrees C and after 5 days of shelf life at 20 degrees C. The chilling tolerance induced by MJ was positively correlated with the reduction in the percent ion leakage of mango tissue. The overall qual...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2001
G Kocsy P von Ballmoos A Rüegsegger G Szalai G Galiba C Brunold

With the aim of analyzing their protective function against chilling-induced injury, the pools of glutathione and its precursors, cysteine (Cys) and gamma-glutamyl-Cys, were increased in the chilling-sensitive maize (Zea mays) inbred line Penjalinan using a combination of two herbicide safeners. Compared with the controls, the greatest increase in the pool size of the three thiols was detected ...

Journal: :Plant & cell physiology 2006
Eung-Jun Park Zoran Jeknic Tony H H Chen

Tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. cv. Moneymaker) plants are chilling sensitive, and do not naturally accumulate glycinebetaine (GB), a metabolite that functions as a stress protectant. We reported previously that exogenous GB application enhanced chilling tolerance in tomato. To understand its protective role better, we have further evaluated various parameters associated with improved tol...

2005
BY E. NAYLOR E. NAYLOR

The so-called temperature independence of many biological rhythms is of functional importance in maintaining the correct phasing of physiological and behavioural activities despite changes in environmental temperatures. Nevertheless, the rhythms can often be partly modified by changes of temperature and it is necessary to consider the extent of this temperature-dependence when speculating about...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2015
Alex S Torson George D Yocum Joseph P Rinehart William P Kemp Julia H Bowsher

The transcriptional responses of insects to long-term, ecologically relevant temperature stress are poorly understood. Long-term exposure to low temperatures, commonly referred to as chilling, can lead to physiological effects collectively known as chill injury. Periodically increasing temperatures during long-term chilling has been shown to increase survival in many insects. However, the trans...

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