AOBPreview originally published online on January 17, 2005
Annals of Botany 2005 95(4):685-693; doi:10.1093/aob/mci070
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Annals of Botany 95/4 © Annals of Botany Company 2005; all rights reserved
Partitioning of 13C-photosynthate from Spur Leaves during Fruit Growth of Three Japanese Pear (Pyrus pyrifolia) Cultivars Differing in Maturation Date
1 The United Graduate School of Agricultural Sciences, Tottori University, Tottori, 680-8533, Japan, 2 Laboratory of Horticultural Science, Faculty of Agriculture, Tottori University, Tottori, 680-8533, Japan and 3 Department of Plant Science, College of Agriculture and Biology, Shanghai Jiaotong University, Shanghai, 201101, China
* For correspondence. E-mail tanabe{at}muses.tottori-u.ac.jp
Received: 21 September 2004 Returned for revision: 11 November 2004 Accepted: 29 November 2004 Published electronically: 17 January 2005
| ABSTRACT |
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Background and Aims In fruit crops, fruit size at harvest is an important aspect of quality. With Japanese pears (Pyrus pyrifolia), later maturing cultivars usually have larger fruits than earlier maturing cultivars. It is considered that the supply of photosynthate during fruit development is a critical determinant of size. To assess the interaction of assimilate supply and early/late maturity of cultivars and its effect on final fruit size, the pattern of carbon assimilate partitioning from spur leaves (source) to fruit and other organs (sinks) during fruit growth was investigated using three genotypes differing in maturation date.
Methods Partitioning of photosynthate from spur leaves during fruit growth was investigated by exposure of spurs to 13CO2 and measurement of the change in 13C abundance in dry matter with time. Leaf number and leaf area per spur, fresh fruit weight, cell number and cell size of the mesocarp were measured and used to model the development of the spur leaf and fruit.
Key Results Compared with the earlier-maturing cultivars Shinsui and Kousui, the larger-fruited, later-maturing cultivar Shinsetsu had a greater total leaf area per spur, greater source strength (source weight x source specific activity), with more 13C assimilated per spur and allocated to fruit, smaller loss of 13C in respiration and export over the season, and longer duration of cell division and enlargement. Histology shows that cultivar differences in final fruit size were mainly attributable to the number of cells in the mesocarp.
Conclusions Assimilate availability during the period of cell division was crucial for early fruit growth and closely correlated with final fruit size. Early fruit growth of the earlier-maturing cultivars, but not the later-maturing ones, was severely restrained by assimilate supply rather than by sink limitation.
Key words: 13C labelling, fruit growth, sink strength, spur leaves, pear, Pyrus pyrifolia Nakai
| INTRODUCTION |
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Regulation of fruit size is of major importance in plant development (Gillaspy et al., 1993
There is wide variation in fruit size in many species of fruit-bearing plants, both wild and cultivated, the latter crops including Japanese pear (Pyrus pyrifolia) (Laney and Quamme, 1975
; Hayashi and Tanabe, 1991
; Grandillo et al., 1999
). Fruit growth of Japanese pear is characterized by an initial period of rapid cell division, followed by a long period of cell expansion, primarily by vacuolation (Hayashi and Tanabe, 1991
; Jackson, 2003
). Thus, cell number and cell size are very important factors determining final fruit size and any environmental factors that affect them will affect final fruit size. Consequently, it is very important to address each phase in order to clarify the mechanisms that control final size.
There have been numerous studies of the effects of genetic and environmental factors on fruit development, such as growth characteristics (Hayashi, 1960
; Jackson, 2003
), hormonal regulation (Hayashi and Tanabe, 1991
), sinksource interactions (Zhang et al., 2005
) and carbohydrate partitioning (Hayashi, 1960
; Teng et al., 1998a
, b
, 1999
, 2001
, 2002
; Yamamoto, 2001
). Partitioning, that is the amount and proportion of photosynthates distributed to fruit at different stages in development, is critical for final fruit size and has attracted more and more attention in many fruit crops (Darnell and Birkhold, 1996
; Escobar-Gutierrez and Gaudillere, 1997
; Amano et al., 1998
; Flore and Layne, 1999
).
In fruit trees, the early stage of fruit development is particularly important, since strong competition exists between the vegetative and reproductive organs both before and after anthesis (Hayashi and Tanabe, 1991
; Jackson, 2003
). Cell division of the mesocarp is closely correlated with final fruit size in peach (Prunus persica; Scorza et al., 1991
) and apple (Malus domestica; Westwood et al., 1967
). It has been suggested that carbon deficits limit cell division and thus affect final fruit size. In general, the carbohydrate supply from reserves has been found to be closely related to early fruit development in many fruit crops (Hayashi and Tanabe, 1991
; Jackson, 2003
), so that defoliation in the previous autumn decreases assimilate reserves and thereby early growth in the spring (Hayashi, 1960
). In other words, the availability of carbohydrates early in the season is crucial for larger fruit production. The fate of photosynthates from spur leaves during the period of rapid fruit growth was partially investigated in Nijisseiki pear: most 13C assimilated in the spur at 87 DAA was either found in the fruit (approx. 48 %) or lost to respiration and export (41 %) by the time of fruit harvest (Teng et al., 2001
). However, the time-course of photosynthate partitioning from spur leaves during fruit development has not been well documented. Moreover, there is little information about genotypic differences in photosynthate partitioning from spur leaves in any fruit, including Japanese pear.
Later-maturing cultivars usually have larger fruits than earlier-maturing cultivars in many crops, including Japanese pear (Hayashi and Tanabe, 1991
), but no general explanation or model for the genotypic differences in fruit size has been advanced. Therefore in order to understand fruit development better, and to promote the production of larger fruit, this study focuses on the fruiting spur unit without bourse shoots in Japanese pear. To establish the relative importance of the supply of photosynthates and the demand from the fruit, in relation to the developmental stages and maturation period of the fruit, the time-course of partitioning of photosynthates from spur leaves during fruit development was investigated together with the structure of the mesocarp in Japanese pear cultivars differing in maturation date.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Plant material
Three Japanese pear Pyrus pyrifolia Nakai cultivars, Shinsui, Kousui and Shinsetsu propagated on Pyrus betulaefolia Bunge rootstocks, were used for experiment. Shinsui is an early-maturing cultivar with small-sized fruit (about 200 g). Kousui has medium-sized fruit (about 350 g), which ripens around 1 week later than Shinsui. Shinsetsu is a late-maturing cultivar with large fruit (more than 1000 g). All cultivars were 20 years old and cultured with a flat-canopied pergolar system (Teng et al., 1998a
Fresh weight of fruit, cell number and cell length of the mesocarp
Fifteen fruit of each cultivar were sampled after anthesis and weighed, then ten fruits were immediately preserved in formalinaceticalcohol (80 % ethanol: acetic acid: formalin = 90 : 5 : 5) for histological analysis. The fruit was cut along the equatorial region. Then the mesocarp width was calculated from the difference between the longest width of a transverse section of fruit and core. Subsequently, a transverse slice of mesocarp was taken along the equatorial region and stained by rubbing softly with a cloth soaked in blue ink. The stained surface was observed under a digital HF microscope system (VH-8000, Keyence, Tokyo, Japan) and an image from a CCD camera displayed on a monitor. Cell length, as an indicator of cell size, was measured from the length of seven contiguous cells from the core to the fruit surface: from these the average cell length was calculated. Ten observation zones per section were measured. Cell number of the mesocarp along the equatorial region was then calculated by dividing the mesocarp width by average cell length, and this was taken as an indicator of total cell number per fruit.
Total leaf area and leaf number per spur
After anthesis, seven fruiting spurs on each cultivar were harvested randomly on each sampling date, and leaf number and total leaf area per spur were measured with a LI-3000A portable leaf area meter (LI-COR, Lincoln, NE, USA).
Net photosynthesis of spur leaves
At 7, 14, 28, 63, 104 and 184 d after anthesis (DAA), net photosynthesis (Pn) of healthy spur leaves was measured between 1100 h and 1200 h by a Shimadzu portable photosynthesis system (Analytical Development Co. Ltd. Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire, UK). The third or fourth leaf from the base of spur was used for Pn measurement. Each leaf was a replicate, with four replicates for each cultivar.
13C labelling and sampling
The earlier maturing cultivars Shinsui and Kousui were labelled at 7, 28, 63 and 104 DAA, and Shinsetsu was also labelled 184 DAA because of its late maturation. Healthy, uniform 2-year-old fruiting spurs without bourse shoots on lateral branch were selected for 13C labelling. Fruit were hand-thinned to one per spur, according to commercial practice, at 30 DAA on earlier maturing cultivars, and 40 DAA for the later one (Shinsetsu). The number of fruit per spur was adjusted to three and one just before 13C labelling at 7 and 28 DAA, respectively. Statistically, one tree was a replicate, with four replicate trees for each cultivar. Three fruiting spurs per tree were selected. One of them was girdled by removing a 2-mm-wide section of bark immediately before 13C labelling; this prevented export of photoassimilate from the spur to enable determination of the total amount of 13C assimilated by the spur. The fruit were covered with aluminium foil to prevent them from fixing carbon dioxide.
Individual spurs were exposed to 13CO2 enclosed in a polyethylene bag that contained a 25 mL glass vial fixed on the frame of the bag. The 13CO2 was generated by injecting 3 mL of 70 % lactic acid on to 0·8 g Ba13CO3 with an abundance of 99 % 13C (Cambridge Isoptope Laboratories, Andover, Massachusetts, USA). To ensure uniform labelling among the spurs, 1·5 h after the start of 13C labelling, unlabelled CO2 was produced by injecting lactic acid into another vial containing 1 g of BaCO3 in the polyethylene bag. Labelling was under ambient field conditions with clear skies and lasted for 2 h between 0800 h and 1000 h for the 7 and 28 DAA labelling periods during the period of initial fruit growth. For the labelling periods 63, 104 and 184 DAA, the labelling was carried out between 0730 h and 0930 h because of high temperatures during the period of rapid fruit growth and before harvest. The four girdled spurs in each sample per cultivar were harvested immediately after labelling. Four spurs on each cultivar were harvested 7 d after 13C labelling (DAL) and the remaining four were collected at the final (commercial) harvest. Harvested spurs were immediately separated into leaves, current shoot, and old wood and fruit, then stored on ice and brought to the laboratory. Fruit was further divided into pedicel, flesh (exocarp + mesocarp) and core (pith of receptacle + pericarp + seeds). The parts were freeze-dried and then weighed. Current shoot, old wood and leaves were oven-dried at 65 °C for 10 d to determine dry weight. The dried material was finely ground in a coffee mill and stored in glass vials for 13C analyses.
Measurement of 13C
13C abundance and carbon contents were determined using an infrared 13CO2 analyser (Model EX-130S, Japan Spectroscopic Co. Ltd., Tokyo, Japan) after combustion of a sample at 900 °C in an O2 stream according to Okano et al. (1983)
and Kouchi and Yoneyama (1984)
. The absolute amounts (mg) of labelled 13C recovered in each organ were calculated as total carbon in each organ x 13C atom %. The total amount of 13C recovered from the girdled spurs harvested immediately after 13C labelling was the basis for calculating the amount and proportion of 13C lost in respiration and exported from the spur. The losses due to respiration and export from the spurs were estimated from the difference between total 13C recovered from girdled spurs harvested immediately after 13C labelling and the amount of 13C in spurs harvested on each sampling date.
Calculation of source strength and relative sink strength
In this study, the 13C abundance of each organ was expressed as atom %. Due to variations in the amount of 13C recovered between treatments and the different weight of plant organs, comparison of photosynthate partitioning was made on sink strength and relative sink strength. Sink strength is considered as the product of sink size and activity and expressed as: sink strength=sink size x sink specific activity (Ho, 1988
). The 13C abundance in each organ was regarded as sink specific activity, and dry weight as sink size. Based on the sink strength at 7 DAL, the relative sink strength (RSS) was calculated by dividing the sink strength of an individual organ by the sum of sink strengths of the whole spur, and the result expressed as a percentage of the total (Zhang et al., 2005
). The leaf is considered the only source in the spur, so source strength refers to the rate at which photosynthate is produced. Sources and sinks are closely in balance in terms of carbon flux, therefore source strength affects the partitioning of photosynthate to sink organs (Farrar, 1996
). The source strength in all cultivars was calculated as source weight x source specific activity 2 h after 13C labelling (HAL).
Statistical analysis
Data were analysed by Duncan's multiple range test (P < 0·01, 0·05). Since the earlier-maturing cultivars were harvested before 184 DAA, 13C labelling 184 DAA was done only in the late-maturing cultivar. The data from Shinsetsu at 184 DAA and from Shinsui and Kousui at 104 DAA were used for the statistical analysis at maturity. Sigmoid curves were fitted to the data of fresh fruit weight by Sigmaplot software (Jandel Scientific, San Rafael, California, USA). To estimate the length of the period of cell division, the increasing patterns of cell number of the mesocarp in all cultivars were fitted by logarithmic curves. The critical point was calculated according to Higashi et al. (1999)
and the period from pollination to the critical point was regarded as the period of cell division for each cultivar.
| RESULTS |
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Leaf growth and fruit development
The three cultivars had similar patterns of leaf and fruit growth, but clearly varied significantly in important aspects with the late-maturing Shinsetsu having more leaves and greater total leaf area per spur than earlier-maturing cultivars (Figs 1
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Fruit development was described by an approximately sigmoid growth pattern based on fresh weight, irrespective of cultivar (Fig. 2). From 0 to 17 weeks after anthesis, the growth rate of Kousui was higher than that of Shinsui and Shinsetsu. Shinsetsu had a much longer linear stage than the other cultivars. The critical point when the slope of the fitted curve was bellow 0·5 cells d1 was calculated and the period from pollination to the critical point was regarded as the period of cell division for each cultivar. The duration of cell division was cultivar-dependent and the critical points in Shinsui, Kousui and Shinsetsu were 34, 36 and 49 d after pollination, respectively (Fig. 3). Histological studies of fruit showed that Shinsetsu had significantly more cells than other cultivars (Fig. 3A). However, the final cell length was not significantly different between Shinsetsu and Kousui, but was smaller in Shinsui (Fig. 3B).
Amount of 13C in spur leaves
The total amount of 13C recovered in spurs at 2 HAL (hours after labelling) indicated the amount of 13C assimilated by spur leaves; it depended on the stage of fruit development and cultivar (Fig. 4A). At 7 DAA, more 13C was recovered in spurs of Shinsetsu than Kousui and Shinsui (2- and 3-fold, respectively), but there was no significant difference between Shinsui and Kousui. At 28 DAA, the amount of 13C in spur leaves of all cultivars was greater than at 7 DAA, since leaf growth was completed (Fig. 1). Moreover, there were significant differences among cultivars at this stage. However, there were no significant differences 63 DAA. At 104 DAA, as well as at 184 DAA, Shinsetsu assimilated more 13C than the other cultivars, which did not differ between each other.
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13C recovered in spurs at 7 d after labelling
There were variations in the amounts of 13C recovered in spurs 7 DAL in all cultivars during fruit development (Fig. 4B). At 14 DAA (7 DAA plus 7 DAL), most 13C from young spur leaves was recovered in spurs and only a small portion of 13C was used for respiration and export. The proportion of losses in Shinsetsu and Shinsui was smaller than in Kousui (Fig. 4C). At 35 DAA (28 DAA plus 7 DAL), almost half of the 13C was lost in respiration and export in Shinsui and Shinsetsu but only about 30 % in Kousui (Fig. 4C). Compared with results at 35 DAA, more 13C was recovered at 70 DAA (63 DAA plus 7 DAL) in all cultivars. A very high proportion (approx. 93 %) of 13C was recovered in Shinsetsu and only approx. 7 % was lost in respiration and export (Fig. 4B, C). Although there were no differences in proportion of losses via respiration and export among cultivars at 111 DAA (104 DAA plus 7 DAL) (Fig. 4C), Shinsetsu retained more 13C in spurs than Shinsui and Kousui (Fig. 4B), because more 13C was assimilated by its spur leaves (Fig. 4A). Similarly, in comparison with Shinsui and Kousui at maturity, more 13C was recovered in Shinsetsu at 191 DAA (184 DAA plus 7 DAL).
Amount of 13C allocated to individual organs
Distribution of 13C in individual organs is shown in Table 1. At 14 DAA, most of the 13C was retained in spur leaves, with Shinsetsu retaining more than the other cultivars. Compared with Kousui and Shinsetsu, very little 13C was recovered in fruit of Shinsui. At 35 DAA, the amount of 13C recovered in leaves was similar to that in fruit of Shinsetsu and Shinsui, but more 13C was in leaves than fruit of Kousui. Subsequently, at 70 and 111 DAA, the amount of 13C retained in leaves was less than that incorporated into fruit in all cultivars. More 13C was allocated to fruit of Shinsetsu than of the other cultivars at 35, 70, and 111 DAA, but at maturity there were no significant differences in amount of 13C allocated to fruit of different cultivars.
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Further analysis of 13C distribution in fruit showed that most of the 13C was recovered in the flesh on each measuring date except at 14 DAA (because of the practical difficulty in division of small fruit). However, relatively more 13C was in the core at 70 DAA. Generally, Shinsetsu had more 13C in flesh and fruit than the other cultivars at 35, 70, and 111 DAA. The proportion of the total 13C partitioned to current shoots and old wood was small in all cultivars during fruit growth. More 13C was allocated to current shoots in Kousui than in the other cultivars at 14 and 35 DAA.
Effects of labelling date on 13C recovery at harvest
At harvest, the spurs labelled at different stages of fruit growth were sampled and separated to determine 13C distribution in individual organs (Table 2). The losses due to respiration and export at the time of harvest were higher than those at 7 DAL in all cultivars (Fig. 4C, Table 2). The proportion of 13C assimilated in spurs and recovered in leaves 7 DAA was 4255 % in all cultivars: a considerable proportion of assimilated 13C was lost in respiration and export particularly in Shinsui (47 %) compared to approx. 27 % in the other cultivars. However, only a very small proportion (approx. 35 %) of 13C incorported was recovered in leaves on other labelling dates. The proportion of 13C allocated to fruit at harvest varied with the labelling date, but increased as fruit grew. Shinsui had the smallest proportion of 13C recovered in fruit of all three cultivars. A much larger proportion of 13C was incorporated into fruit in Shinsetsu at 7 DAA than Shinsui. As mentioned earlier, Pn of mature spur leaves increased and remained relatively high during most of the period of fruit growth (Fig. 5). Shinsui and Kousui, with rapid fruit growth (Fig. 2), had a higher Pn than Shinsetsu during early growth; as the fruit matured the rate of Pn decreased in the three cultivars, with Shinsetsu maintaining Pn much longer than the others.
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Source strength and relative sink strength
Changes of source strength in Japanese pear cultivars during fruit growth are shown in Fig. 6. The late-maturing Shinsetsu exhibited greater source strength than the earlier-maturing Shinsui and Kousui at each labelling date. Although no significant differences were observed at 7 and 63 DAA between Shinsui and Kousui, the latter had greater source strength than the former at 28 and 104 DAA.
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During the initial period of fruit growth, spur leaves had greater RSS than other organs (Fig. 7), although a smaller RSS of spur leaves was observed in Kousui. The RSS of current shoots decreased with time after anthesis. Old wood also had small RSS; this increased from 14 to 35 and 70 DAA but then decreased again. The RSS of fruit was small at 14 DAA but increased progressively to over 80 % of the 13C assimilated.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Allocation of 13C assimilate during fruit growth
In Japanese pear, fruit growth was shown by Hayashi (1960)
At 28 DAA, the fruit of Shinsui and Kousui are in a transitional phase when cell division ceases and cell enlargement starts, whereas Shinsetsu fruits are still in the active cell division phase and have not reached the linear growth phase (Figs 2, 3). Although there was no difference in the RSS of fruit between Shinsui and Shinsetsu (Fig. 7), the differences in the total leaf area per spur (Fig. 1) and the total amount of 13C assimilated by spur leaves (Fig. 4A) resulted in differences in the amount of 13C allocated to fruits. Apparently more photosynthate is available and invested in the early fruit development of the later-maturing cultivar. In contrast, Kousui fruit grew somewhat faster than Shinsui (Fig. 2), but there was no difference between them in the amount of 13C allocated to fruit (Table 1). This could be partially interpreted as a consequence of the larger fruit in Kousui at anthesis (data not shown).
At 63 DAA, there was no significant difference between the cultivars in total amount of 13C assimilated by spur leaves, but there was in total leaf area per spur. At this stage, Shinsetsu fruit are just in the early phase of cell enlargement while the fruit of Shinsui and Kousui are in the phases of rapid growth. Enhanced leaf photosynthetic rate (Fig. 5) and RSS of fruit in Shinsui and Kousui supported the conclusion that, generally, photosynthesis and carbohydrate metabolism in source leaves respond to sink activity (Paul and Foyer, 2001
). Regardless of fruit, RSS of Shinsetsu was significantly lower than that of Shinsui and Kousui, in which more 13C was translocated to fruit, and incorporated particularly into the flesh. This could be partially explained by a much smaller proportion of 13C loss in Shinsetsu.
At 104 DAA, fruit of Shinsui and Kousui were mature while those of Shinsetsu were still in the linear growth phase, because of its longer duration of cell enlargement and therefore of fruit growth (Figs 2, 3). Although no significant differences occurred in the RSS of fruit between cultivars (Fig. 7), there was greater 13C allocation to fruit in Shinsetsu than in the other cultivars (Table 1) because of its greater source strength (Fig. 6). Shinsetsu still had greater source strength at 184 DAA (as well as at 104 DAA) because of the maintenance of active sinks and longer leaf area duration.
Losses in respiration and export
In addition to sink activity and sink size, carbon accumulation depends on sink characteristics such as photosynthesis and respiration of the fruit itself, as well as carbon supply via the peduncle attachment (Henton et al., 1999
). As with apple (Bepete and Lakso, 1997
), pear fruit has a high respiration rate early in development, when cell division is active, and this subsequently declines as fruit matures. By comparison with that 7 DAL at each developmental stage, the losses increased at final harvest and varied with labelling date and cultivar (Table 2). In Shinsetsu, a very low proportion of loss (approx. 7 %) occurred 7 DAL at 63 DAA, but it approached 60 % at final harvest (Fig. 4C, Table 2), attributable to its long period of fruit enlargement. As with avocado (Richings et al., 2000
), different losses may partially contribute to the variation in fruit size between Shinsui and Kousui, which have similar duration of fruit growth.
Effects of assimilate supply for fruit growth
Generally, it is accepted that if more photosynthate (carbohydrates) are available, they will be allocated to fruits and result in a large fruit size of later-maturing cultivars, with longer periods of fruit enlargement. However, the early stage of fruit growth and assimilate availability is also important in pear, as our data show. Flowers emerge earlier than spur leaves in Japanese pear (Jackson, 2003
). Many studies have pointed out that the current photosynthate available during the initial period of fruit growth has an important role in cell division (Hayashi and Tanabe, 1991
; Bepete and Lakso, 1998
; Famiani et al., 2000
; Jackson, 2003
). Histology indicates that the cell number should be the primary determinant of final fruit size in Japanese pear, as has been shown in peach (Scorza et al., 1991
) and apple (Westwood et al., 1967
). Therefore, photosynthate availability is crucial for fruit growth especially during the period of cell division, and is closely correlated with final fruit size. The crop-load is very low in the flat-canopied pergolar system and no source limitation for fruit growth was observed after fruit thinning (Zhang et al., 2005
). However, before fruit thinning there are more fruit per spur because of enhanced fruit set by hand-pollination compared with natural pollination. Furthermore, the earlier-maturing cultivars always have more flowers per cluster on spurs than the later-maturing cultivars (unpublished results). Thus, less photosynthate would be allocated to individual fruit in earlier-maturing cultivars than in the later-maturing ones, and early fruit growth of earlier-maturing cultivars (but not of later-maturing) was severely restrained by assimilate supply rather than by sink limitation. Grossman and DeJong (1995)
have also pointed out that source limitation early in fruit development of peach results in permanent loss of growth potential. Therefore, early fruit thinning should be more important for large fruit production in the early-maturating cultivars.
As in apple, spur leaves of Japanese pear are a larger proportion of total leaf area early in the season than at full canopy (Forshey et al., 1987
; Hayashi and Tanabe, 1991
). For larger fruit production, therefore, earlier leaf emergence and leaf production are very important to ensure rapid fruit development in the early-maturing cultivars with shorter duration of fruit growth. Manipulation of assimilate supply may be achieved by pruning-out water shoots (one of the vegetative shoot types with excessive growth) in late October to promote leaf production and earlier leaf emergence, and sink capacity may be regulated by retaining as many flower buds as possible, by light spur pruning, and by altering fruit number and size by fruit thinning to optimize sink capacity in Shinsui (Hayashi and Tanabe, 1991
).
In conclusion, fruit growth of Japanese pear depends on the interaction of assimilate supply from source leaves (a function of leaf area and photosynthetic ability), and on the capacity (number, size, activity and duration of growth) of the sinks. We have shown that early assimilate supply as well as continued fruit growth and assimilate production are important for development of large fruit in Japanese pear.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We are grateful to Dr Akira Yoshida (Tottori Horticultural Experiment station, Japan) for use of a digital HF microscope system.
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