Horticultural Reviews, Volume 44

(Marcin) #1

  1. THE FLORICULTURE VEGETATIVE CUTTING INDUSTRY 131


in order to increase the natural convection currents in the greenhouse
and to provide a cooler, less humid environment. Concrete floors also
reduce greenhouse humidity, which helps to prevent condensation
from forming on the inside of the glazing material during the night and
dripping condensate wetting the plants below; thus, concrete floors help
reduce pathogen pressure.
Heat stress can cause physiological problems. For example, poinsettia
stock plants of certain cultivars exposed to high temperatures (30◦C) fail
to develop viable axillary buds (Faust and Heins 1996). Often this phe-
nomenon is not noticed until the cuttings have been harvested, shipped,
and propagated. The crop fails to develop lateral shoots after the shoot
apex is removed. The plants are particularly susceptible to heat stress
when the individual stock plants are widely spaced, since this results
in higher plant temperatures. Once a stand of stock plants closes its
canopy together, evaporative cooling due to transpiration helps to min-
imize heat stress and improve axillary bud development.



  1. Daily Light Integral.Light plays a critical role in stock-plant produc-
    tion, and daily light integral (DLI) measurements have become widely
    adopted by the floriculture industry (Korczynski et al. 2002). Poin-
    settia cutting stem caliper increased as the DLI increased from 4 to
    10.6 mol⋅m−^2 ⋅d−^1 (Chong et al. 2014). This response to DLI can be an
    important characteristic in the marketplace, since thin-caliper stems are
    considered to be of inferior quality. The challenge faced in stock-plant
    production is that the tallest stems in the canopy are harvested weekly,
    and when those cuttings are removed, the next group of cuttings that are
    exposed to direct sunlight will have just 1 week for the stem and leaf
    tissues to mature prior to those cuttings being removing during the next
    weekly harvest. This maturation process entails leaves becoming more
    resistant to physical stresses and pathogen pressure in the postharvest
    environment.
    DLI affects the leaf-unfolding rate of shoots positioned in a dense
    stock-plant canopy. Thus, DLI impacts that rate of progress of a shoot
    toward becoming a harvestable cutting. For example, poinsettia cutting
    yield increased from 2.5 to 6.0 cuttings/plant/week as DLI increased
    from 2.2 to 21.0 mol⋅m−^2 ⋅d−^1 (Chong 2005). Improved cutting yield and
    propagation performance resulting from higher DLI has also been doc-
    umented for stock plants of heliotrope, New Guinea impatiens, petu-
    nia, scaevola, and verbena (Verbena×hybrida) (Donnelly and Fisher
    2001; Lopez 2007). The effect of DLI on unrooted cutting postharvest
    and propagation performance is discussed in Section III.

Free download pdf