Shade, irrigation and variety effects upon bronzing responses of dry beans in Colorado

Bronzing was observed in many of the bean trials conducted at Fort Collins (Colorado, USA) during 1982 to study the influence of water and shading stress on photosynthesis and protein content of 3 dry bean var., Roza, Pinto U.I. 111, and Olathe. Bronzing symptoms appeared during the late flowering a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Schwartz, Howard F., Ballarin, M., Riggle, R.L.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 1984
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/88538
_version_ 1855520132341694464
author Schwartz, Howard F.
Ballarin, M.
Riggle, R.L.
author_browse Ballarin, M.
Riggle, R.L.
Schwartz, Howard F.
author_facet Schwartz, Howard F.
Ballarin, M.
Riggle, R.L.
author_sort Schwartz, Howard F.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Bronzing was observed in many of the bean trials conducted at Fort Collins (Colorado, USA) during 1982 to study the influence of water and shading stress on photosynthesis and protein content of 3 dry bean var., Roza, Pinto U.I. 111, and Olathe. Bronzing symptoms appeared during the late flowering and pod formation stages. A scale of 1-5 was used with 1 as no bronzing and 5 as severe bronzing (more than 50 percent leaf area bronzed). Results suggest that bronzing severity increased when plants were shaded and decreased when plants were under moisture stress. These treatment trends occurred at a similar rate for the 3 var., but the degree of bronzing was influenced by the var. Irrigation and shade treatments apparently influenced stomatal opening and the length of exposure to pollutants. (CIAT)
format Journal Article
id CGSpace88538
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1984
publishDateRange 1984
publishDateSort 1984
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace885382017-10-12T08:03:20Z Shade, irrigation and variety effects upon bronzing responses of dry beans in Colorado Schwartz, Howard F. Ballarin, M. Riggle, R.L. phaseolus vulgaris water stress cultivars plant physiological disorders air pollution usa north america Bronzing was observed in many of the bean trials conducted at Fort Collins (Colorado, USA) during 1982 to study the influence of water and shading stress on photosynthesis and protein content of 3 dry bean var., Roza, Pinto U.I. 111, and Olathe. Bronzing symptoms appeared during the late flowering and pod formation stages. A scale of 1-5 was used with 1 as no bronzing and 5 as severe bronzing (more than 50 percent leaf area bronzed). Results suggest that bronzing severity increased when plants were shaded and decreased when plants were under moisture stress. These treatment trends occurred at a similar rate for the 3 var., but the degree of bronzing was influenced by the var. Irrigation and shade treatments apparently influenced stomatal opening and the length of exposure to pollutants. (CIAT) 1984 2017-10-12T08:03:20Z 2017-10-12T08:03:20Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/88538 en Open Access SCHWARTZ, H.F.; BALLARIN, M.; RIGGLE, R.L. 1984. Shade, irrigation and variety effects upon bronzing responses of dry beans in Colorado. Bean Improvement Cooperative. Annual Report (USA). 26:20-21.
spellingShingle phaseolus vulgaris
water stress
cultivars
plant physiological disorders
air pollution
usa
north america
Schwartz, Howard F.
Ballarin, M.
Riggle, R.L.
Shade, irrigation and variety effects upon bronzing responses of dry beans in Colorado
title Shade, irrigation and variety effects upon bronzing responses of dry beans in Colorado
title_full Shade, irrigation and variety effects upon bronzing responses of dry beans in Colorado
title_fullStr Shade, irrigation and variety effects upon bronzing responses of dry beans in Colorado
title_full_unstemmed Shade, irrigation and variety effects upon bronzing responses of dry beans in Colorado
title_short Shade, irrigation and variety effects upon bronzing responses of dry beans in Colorado
title_sort shade irrigation and variety effects upon bronzing responses of dry beans in colorado
topic phaseolus vulgaris
water stress
cultivars
plant physiological disorders
air pollution
usa
north america
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/88538
work_keys_str_mv AT schwartzhowardf shadeirrigationandvarietyeffectsuponbronzingresponsesofdrybeansincolorado
AT ballarinm shadeirrigationandvarietyeffectsuponbronzingresponsesofdrybeansincolorado
AT rigglerl shadeirrigationandvarietyeffectsuponbronzingresponsesofdrybeansincolorado