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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Characterization of leaf senescence and pod development in soybean explants.

Peter M. Neumann, +2 more
- 01 May 1983 - 
- Vol. 72, Iss: 1, pp 182-185
TLDR
The data suggest that the flux of minerals and cytokinin from the roots could influence foliarsenescence in soybeans, but increased stomatal resistance does not seem to cause foliar senescence.
Abstract
Excised soybean (Glycine max [L] Merrill) cv Anoka leaf discs tend to remain green even after the corresponding intact leaves have turned yello on fruiting plants We have found that explants which include a leaf along with a stem segment (below the node) and one or more pods (maintained on distilled H(2)O) show similar but accelerated leaf yellowing and abscission compared with intact plants In podded explants excised at pre-podfill, the leaves begin to yellow after 16 days, whereas those excised at late podfill begin to yellow after only 6 days Although stomatal resistances remain low during the first light period after excision, they subsequently increase to levels above those in leaves of intact plants Explants taken at mid to late podfill with one or more pods per node behave like intact plants in that pod load does not affect the time lag to leaf yellowing Explant leaf yellowing and abscission are delayed by removal of the pods or seeds or by incubation in complete mineral nutrient solution or in 46 micromolar zeatin Like chorophyll breakdown, protein loss is accelerated in the explants, but minerals or especially zeatin can retard the loss Pods on explants show rates and patterns of color change (green to yellow to brown) similar to those of pods on intact plants These changes start earlier in explants on water than in intact plants, but they can be delayed by adding zeatin Seed dry weight increased in explants, almost as much as in intact plants Explants appear to be good analogs of the corresponding parts of the intact plant, and they should prove useful for analyzing pod development and mechanisms of foliar senescence Moreover, our data suggest that the flux of minerals and cytokinin from the roots could influence foliar senescence in soybeans, but increased stomatal resistance does not seem to cause foliar senescence

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Citations
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Book ChapterDOI

Whole plant senescence

TL;DR: This chapter discusses causes of monocarpicsenescence and senescence in polycarpic plants and clones and a prominent shift (diversion) in growth-related allocation of resources inmonocarpy seems to be part of a reproductive strategy that optimizes reproductive output for the plants.
Book ChapterDOI

Phenoptosis: Programmed Death of an Organism

TL;DR: It is hypothesized that the stress-induced ischemic diseases of brain and heart as well as carcinogenesis if they are induced by repeated stresses also represent phenoptoses that, in contrast to sepsis, are age-dependent.
Journal ArticleDOI

Correlation of xylem sap cytokinin levels with monocarpic senescence in soybean.

TL;DR: Judging from their activity, concentrations and response to depodding, DZR and ZR may be the most important senescence retardants in soybean xylem sap.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Transport of nitrogen in the xylem of soybean plants.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that ureides play a dominant role in N transport in nodulated soybeans and that the synthesis of ureide is largely dependent upon nodulation and N(2) fixation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Design calibration and field use of a stomatal diffusion porometer.

TL;DR: The energy balance and the diffusion porometer measurements indicate that the boundary layer resistances of leaves in the field are substantially less than those predicted from heat transport formulas based on wind flow and leaf size.