Age-dependent effectiveness of exogenous abscisic acid in height control of bell pepper and jalapeno transplants Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Height control of vegetable transplants is important for improving their adaptability to shipping and transplanting operations. Abscisic acid (ABA) inhibits stem elongation but can also induce undesirable growth modification. To optimize its application timing for effective height control, we examined age-dependent sensitivity of various growth variables to ABA in two pepper cultivars (Capsicum annuum L.). Bell pepper 'Excursion II' seedlings were sprayed once with 3.8mM ABA at 25, 18, or 11 days before transplanting (DBT), or twice with 1.9mM ABA at 25 and 18 DBT. Jalapeo 'Colima' seedlings were sprayed once with 3.8mM ABA at 22, 15, or 8 DBT, or twice with 1.9mM ABA at 22 and 15 DBT. For all treatments, the application rate was 0.71mg ABA per plant with the spray volume of 0.61Lm-2 (0.71ml/plant). Only 'Excursion II' maintained significantly shorter plant height in all ABA treatments until the transplanting stage, ranging from 80% to 88% of the control. By contrast, leaf chlorosis and overall growth delay were induced by ABA in 'Colima'. Age-dependent sensitivity to ABA was evident in leaf area of both cultivars, and in stem diameter and shoot and root biomass of jalapeo 'Colima', all of which showed maximal reductions when 3.8mM ABA was applied at the cotyledon stage (first application). These results suggest that ABA is effective in height control for bell pepper 'Excursion II', and that it should be applied at least one week after the emergence of first true leaf to minimize the negative side effects. Importantly, subsequent field evaluations demonstrated that the growth modulation by ABA was only transient with no negative impact on marketable yield. 2014 Elsevier B.V.

published proceedings

  • SCIENTIA HORTICULTURAE

author list (cited authors)

  • Agehara, S., & Leskovar, D. I.

citation count

  • 8

complete list of authors

  • Agehara, Shinsuke||Leskovar, Daniel I

publication date

  • August 2014