Phenological development of East African highland banana involves tradeoffs between physiological age and chronological age

The phenology of East African highland banana (Musa acuminata AAA-EA, hereafter referred to as ‘high-land banana’) is poorly understood. We tested three hypotheses: (1) the physiological age at floweringis independent of site effects, (2) there is no difference in threshold size at flowering between...

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Autores principales: Taulya, Godfrey, Asten, Piet J.A. van, Leffelaar, P.A., Giller, Kenneth E.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76100
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author Taulya, Godfrey
Asten, Piet J.A. van
Leffelaar, P.A.
Giller, Kenneth E.
author_browse Asten, Piet J.A. van
Giller, Kenneth E.
Leffelaar, P.A.
Taulya, Godfrey
author_facet Taulya, Godfrey
Asten, Piet J.A. van
Leffelaar, P.A.
Giller, Kenneth E.
author_sort Taulya, Godfrey
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The phenology of East African highland banana (Musa acuminata AAA-EA, hereafter referred to as ‘high-land banana’) is poorly understood. We tested three hypotheses: (1) the physiological age at floweringis independent of site effects, (2) there is no difference in threshold size at flowering between sites withdifferent growth potential, and (3) morphological and physiological components of highland banana rel-ative growth rate (RGR) contribute equally to mitigate growth reduction in response to limiting supplyof water, K or N. The physiological age of highland banana plants from field trials at Kawanda (centralUganda) and Ntungamo (south-western Uganda) was computed from daily temperature records. Growthanalysis was conducted using RGR, net assimilation rate (NAR), specific leaf area (SLA) and leaf mass ratio(LMR) estimated from allometry. Growth response coefficients were used for quantifying the relativecontribution of NAR, SLA and LMR to RGR. Physiological age at flowering was delayed by 739?C d atKawanda compared with that at Ntungamo whose chronological age at flowering was in turn 51 d older.At both sites a threshold total dry mass of 1.5 kg per plant was required for flowering. Faster absolutegrowth rate and NAR fostered by wet conditions, K input and cooler temperatures enabled plants atNtungamo to attain the threshold total dry mass sooner than those at Kawanda, hence the phenotypicplasticity in age at flowering. Net assimilation rate contributed at least 90% to RGR increase due to wetconditions at both sites. The contribution of NAR to RGR increase in response to K at Kawanda reducedto 38% while that for SLA increased to 49%. Net assimilation rate contributes more to highland bananaRGR modulation than SLA except when warmer conditions reduce NAR. Differences in crop growth ratecause phenotypic plasticity in highland banana rate of phenological development.
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spelling CGSpace761002024-08-27T10:35:28Z Phenological development of East African highland banana involves tradeoffs between physiological age and chronological age Taulya, Godfrey Asten, Piet J.A. van Leffelaar, P.A. Giller, Kenneth E. musa acuminata growth rate bananas The phenology of East African highland banana (Musa acuminata AAA-EA, hereafter referred to as ‘high-land banana’) is poorly understood. We tested three hypotheses: (1) the physiological age at floweringis independent of site effects, (2) there is no difference in threshold size at flowering between sites withdifferent growth potential, and (3) morphological and physiological components of highland banana rel-ative growth rate (RGR) contribute equally to mitigate growth reduction in response to limiting supplyof water, K or N. The physiological age of highland banana plants from field trials at Kawanda (centralUganda) and Ntungamo (south-western Uganda) was computed from daily temperature records. Growthanalysis was conducted using RGR, net assimilation rate (NAR), specific leaf area (SLA) and leaf mass ratio(LMR) estimated from allometry. Growth response coefficients were used for quantifying the relativecontribution of NAR, SLA and LMR to RGR. Physiological age at flowering was delayed by 739?C d atKawanda compared with that at Ntungamo whose chronological age at flowering was in turn 51 d older.At both sites a threshold total dry mass of 1.5 kg per plant was required for flowering. Faster absolutegrowth rate and NAR fostered by wet conditions, K input and cooler temperatures enabled plants atNtungamo to attain the threshold total dry mass sooner than those at Kawanda, hence the phenotypicplasticity in age at flowering. Net assimilation rate contributed at least 90% to RGR increase due to wetconditions at both sites. The contribution of NAR to RGR increase in response to K at Kawanda reducedto 38% while that for SLA increased to 49%. Net assimilation rate contributes more to highland bananaRGR modulation than SLA except when warmer conditions reduce NAR. Differences in crop growth ratecause phenotypic plasticity in highland banana rate of phenological development. 2014-10 2016-07-11T08:41:59Z 2016-07-11T08:41:59Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76100 en Limited Access Elsevier Taulya, G., Van Asten, P., Leffelaar, P.A. & Giller, K. (2014). Phenological development of East African highland banana involves trade-offs between physiological age and chronological age. European Journal of Agronomy, 60, 41-53.
spellingShingle musa acuminata
growth rate
bananas
Taulya, Godfrey
Asten, Piet J.A. van
Leffelaar, P.A.
Giller, Kenneth E.
Phenological development of East African highland banana involves tradeoffs between physiological age and chronological age
title Phenological development of East African highland banana involves tradeoffs between physiological age and chronological age
title_full Phenological development of East African highland banana involves tradeoffs between physiological age and chronological age
title_fullStr Phenological development of East African highland banana involves tradeoffs between physiological age and chronological age
title_full_unstemmed Phenological development of East African highland banana involves tradeoffs between physiological age and chronological age
title_short Phenological development of East African highland banana involves tradeoffs between physiological age and chronological age
title_sort phenological development of east african highland banana involves tradeoffs between physiological age and chronological age
topic musa acuminata
growth rate
bananas
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76100
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AT leffelaarpa phenologicaldevelopmentofeastafricanhighlandbananainvolvestradeoffsbetweenphysiologicalageandchronologicalage
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