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AOBPreview originally published online on January 28, 2008
Annals of Botany 2008 101(4):579-594; doi:10.1093/aob/mcm327
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© The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Annals of Botany Company. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Variability of Phyllochron, Plastochron and Rate of Increase in Height in Photoperiod-sensitive Sorghum Varieties

B. Clerget1,*, M. Dingkuhn2, E. Gozé2, H. F. W. Rattunde3 and B. Ney4

1 ICRISAT/CIRAD, UPR Agrobiodiversité en savanes, BP 320, Bamako, Mali
2 CIRAD, UPR Modélisation intégrative, Avenue Agropolis, 34398 Montpellier Cedex 5, France
3 ICRISAT, BP 320, Bamako, Mali
4 UMR INRA-AgroParisTech Environnement et Grandes Cultures, 78850 Thiverval-Grignon, France

* For correspondence. E-mail benoit.clerget{at}cirad.fr

Received: 14 October 2007    Returned for revision: 16 November 2007    Accepted: 4 December 2007    Published electronically: 28 January 2008

Background and Aims: West African sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) varieties are generally highly photoperiod-sensitive, which is a necessary adaptation to the variable onset date of the rainy season and the variable dates of sowing in the savannah zone. Depending on sowing date, plants can produce from 12 to >40 leaves on the main culm, with height varying from 1 m to more than 5 m. The present study aimed to better understand the complex phenology of these variables.

Methods: A 2-year series of monthly sowings of three West African sorghum varieties was conducted near Bamako, Mali. Drought stress was avoided by supplemental irrigation. Rate of initiation of primordia at the stem apex was recorded, together with rate of leaf emergence and increase in plant height.

Key Results: Leaf initiation and appearance rates (plastochron–1 and phyllochron–1) were constant for a given sowing date in cases where less than 20 leaves were produced (generally observed with late sowing dates). In contrast, rates were bilinear for early sowing dates, for which plants produced more than 20 leaves. The secondary rates, which occurred from the 20th leaf onwards, were only half of the initial rate. Plastochron and phyllochron showed large variations among sowing dates, and were correlated with the rate of plant height increase. The initial plastochron and phyllochron were positively correlated with soil temperature and negatively correlated with both day length and day-to-day change of day length prevailing at plant emergence, but these factors explained only half of the variation observed.

Conclusions: Although they belong to different genetic groups and have different height and photoperiod sensitivity, the three varieties studied exhibited similar response patterns of development rates among phenological phases and seasons, with the local landrace showing the greatest variation due to its longer vegetative phase and longer stem internodes. The possible adaptive advantages in African savannah environments of bilinear development rates and the associated limitation in height increase are discussed.

Key words: Sorghum bicolor, phenology, plastochron, phyllochron, photoperiod, stem growth


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