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Moderation of growth and sucrose flux in sugarcane by temperature.

Sugarcane plants (cultivar NCo376) were studied to assess the effects of temperature and
season (spring and autumn equinox) on the morphological and physiological response of
stalk components. Plants were grown from single-eyed setts for ca. five months and then
placed into three temperature controlled glasshouses (22/12°C (C), 27/17°C (W) and
32/22°C (H) day/night temperatures). The plants were sampled twice weekly over a one
month period., and intemodes 4, 6 and 10 of the primary haulms of each plant sampled for
growth and sugar analysis.
During spring, the leaf emergence rates were 0.0303, 0.1095 and 0.1682 leaves d(-1) at
temperatures C, W and H, respectively; and 0.0327, 0.0824 and 0.113 leaves d(-1) in
autumn. The phyllochron intervals were 114°Cd in spring and 147°Cd in autumn. Highest
green leaf blade area of the primary haulms was achieved at H (438.0 and 511.7 cm2 in
spring and autumn, respectively). The stalk extension rates were 1.22, 1.02, 0.38 cm d(-1)
(spring) and 1.35, 0.98, 0.45 cm d(-1) (autumn), respectively, in descending order of
temperature. Total biomass and stalk biomass per plant were not affected by temperature,
despite the differences in stem elongation. Internodes of plants at C were shorter but
thicker and heavier than the comparable internodes of plants at W and H.
In autumn, the mature internode sucrose concentrations were 35.5, 29.2 and 25.5% at C,
W and H, respectively; corresponding to mean RS% of 5.7, 9.8 and 13.3%, and fibre %
of 58.8, 61.1 and 61.3%, at the respective ascending order of temperature. Sucrose % in
the mature internodes in spring were 27.8, 20.9 and 19.9% at C, W and H, respectively;
corresponding to RS% of 5.9, 9.76 and 10.9% and fibre % of 66.3, 69.4 and 69.2% at the
respective ascending order of temperature. Temperature effect on the concentration of the
stalk components of the immature internodes was in general not significant. Sucrose
partitioning coefficients in the mature internodes were 0.25, 0.21 and 0.20 in spring and
0.50, 0.32 and 0.21 in autumn (at C, W and H, respectively). Data that resulted from this
study, which is isolated to temperature and cultivar NCo376 can be used in models of
sugarcane that simulate leaf appearance and senescence, assimilate partitioning between
leaf and stalk and assimilate partitioning between the stalk components namely sucrose,
reducing sugars and fibre. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2005.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:ukzn/oai:http://researchspace.ukzn.ac.za:10413/4490
Date January 2005
CreatorsNgomane, Dambuza.
ContributorsGreenfield, Peter L., Smit, Michiel.
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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