Shoot growth in Coffea arabica, 2: Growth flushing stimulated by irrigation

The growth activity of axillary and terminal vegetative apices of Coffea arabica trees was compared when growing in the field in Kenya under carefully controlled soil moisture regimes in which the trees were irrigated weekly, or when irrigation and rainfall were with held for different periods and ar different times during the hot dry season; the effect of the treatments on internal water stress was studied using a stomatal infiltration technique. Weekly irrigation to maintain the soil beneath trees near to field capacity failed to relieve water stress measured during the day, indicating that the evaporative demand of the atmosphere plays a larger part than soil moisture in determining the water status of the tree. However, trees irrigated after eight weeks' enforced drought flushed immediately, producing leaves faster and opening their stomata during the day to a greater extent than trees which had been regularly irrigated. Trees which experienced twelve weeks enforced drought produced approximately 70 per cent more new laterals when the trees were irrigated again than did trees which experienced shorter periods of drought stress. Water stress appears to stimulate the trees into compensatory physiological activity when the stress is eventually relieved, possibly by decreasing root resistance to water uptake

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Main Authors: 51476 Browning G., 67809 Fisher, N.M.
Format: biblioteca
Published: Ago
Subjects:COFFEA ARABICA, ETAPAS DE DESARROLLO DE LA PLANTA, RIEGO, FISIOLOGIA, RAMAS PLAGIOTROPICAS, RAMAS ORTOTROPICAS,
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id KOHA-OAI-BVE:72461
record_format koha
spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:724612020-01-23T20:54:40ZShoot growth in Coffea arabica, 2: Growth flushing stimulated by irrigation 51476 Browning G. 67809 Fisher, N.M. Ago 1975The growth activity of axillary and terminal vegetative apices of Coffea arabica trees was compared when growing in the field in Kenya under carefully controlled soil moisture regimes in which the trees were irrigated weekly, or when irrigation and rainfall were with held for different periods and ar different times during the hot dry season; the effect of the treatments on internal water stress was studied using a stomatal infiltration technique. Weekly irrigation to maintain the soil beneath trees near to field capacity failed to relieve water stress measured during the day, indicating that the evaporative demand of the atmosphere plays a larger part than soil moisture in determining the water status of the tree. However, trees irrigated after eight weeks' enforced drought flushed immediately, producing leaves faster and opening their stomata during the day to a greater extent than trees which had been regularly irrigated. Trees which experienced twelve weeks enforced drought produced approximately 70 per cent more new laterals when the trees were irrigated again than did trees which experienced shorter periods of drought stress. Water stress appears to stimulate the trees into compensatory physiological activity when the stress is eventually relieved, possibly by decreasing root resistance to water uptakeThe growth activity of axillary and terminal vegetative apices of Coffea arabica trees was compared when growing in the field in Kenya under carefully controlled soil moisture regimes in which the trees were irrigated weekly, or when irrigation and rainfall were with held for different periods and ar different times during the hot dry season; the effect of the treatments on internal water stress was studied using a stomatal infiltration technique. Weekly irrigation to maintain the soil beneath trees near to field capacity failed to relieve water stress measured during the day, indicating that the evaporative demand of the atmosphere plays a larger part than soil moisture in determining the water status of the tree. However, trees irrigated after eight weeks' enforced drought flushed immediately, producing leaves faster and opening their stomata during the day to a greater extent than trees which had been regularly irrigated. Trees which experienced twelve weeks enforced drought produced approximately 70 per cent more new laterals when the trees were irrigated again than did trees which experienced shorter periods of drought stress. Water stress appears to stimulate the trees into compensatory physiological activity when the stress is eventually relieved, possibly by decreasing root resistance to water uptakeCOFFEA ARABICAETAPAS DE DESARROLLO DE LA PLANTARIEGOFISIOLOGIARAMAS PLAGIOTROPICASRAMAS ORTOTROPICASJournal of Horticultural Science (RU)
institution IICA
collection Koha
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode cat-sibiica
tag biblioteca
region America Central
libraryname Sistema de Bibliotecas IICA/CATIE
topic COFFEA ARABICA
ETAPAS DE DESARROLLO DE LA PLANTA
RIEGO
FISIOLOGIA
RAMAS PLAGIOTROPICAS
RAMAS ORTOTROPICAS
COFFEA ARABICA
ETAPAS DE DESARROLLO DE LA PLANTA
RIEGO
FISIOLOGIA
RAMAS PLAGIOTROPICAS
RAMAS ORTOTROPICAS
spellingShingle COFFEA ARABICA
ETAPAS DE DESARROLLO DE LA PLANTA
RIEGO
FISIOLOGIA
RAMAS PLAGIOTROPICAS
RAMAS ORTOTROPICAS
COFFEA ARABICA
ETAPAS DE DESARROLLO DE LA PLANTA
RIEGO
FISIOLOGIA
RAMAS PLAGIOTROPICAS
RAMAS ORTOTROPICAS
51476 Browning G.
67809 Fisher, N.M.
Shoot growth in Coffea arabica, 2: Growth flushing stimulated by irrigation
description The growth activity of axillary and terminal vegetative apices of Coffea arabica trees was compared when growing in the field in Kenya under carefully controlled soil moisture regimes in which the trees were irrigated weekly, or when irrigation and rainfall were with held for different periods and ar different times during the hot dry season; the effect of the treatments on internal water stress was studied using a stomatal infiltration technique. Weekly irrigation to maintain the soil beneath trees near to field capacity failed to relieve water stress measured during the day, indicating that the evaporative demand of the atmosphere plays a larger part than soil moisture in determining the water status of the tree. However, trees irrigated after eight weeks' enforced drought flushed immediately, producing leaves faster and opening their stomata during the day to a greater extent than trees which had been regularly irrigated. Trees which experienced twelve weeks enforced drought produced approximately 70 per cent more new laterals when the trees were irrigated again than did trees which experienced shorter periods of drought stress. Water stress appears to stimulate the trees into compensatory physiological activity when the stress is eventually relieved, possibly by decreasing root resistance to water uptake
format
topic_facet COFFEA ARABICA
ETAPAS DE DESARROLLO DE LA PLANTA
RIEGO
FISIOLOGIA
RAMAS PLAGIOTROPICAS
RAMAS ORTOTROPICAS
author 51476 Browning G.
67809 Fisher, N.M.
author_facet 51476 Browning G.
67809 Fisher, N.M.
author_sort 51476 Browning G.
title Shoot growth in Coffea arabica, 2: Growth flushing stimulated by irrigation
title_short Shoot growth in Coffea arabica, 2: Growth flushing stimulated by irrigation
title_full Shoot growth in Coffea arabica, 2: Growth flushing stimulated by irrigation
title_fullStr Shoot growth in Coffea arabica, 2: Growth flushing stimulated by irrigation
title_full_unstemmed Shoot growth in Coffea arabica, 2: Growth flushing stimulated by irrigation
title_sort shoot growth in coffea arabica, 2: growth flushing stimulated by irrigation
publishDate Ago
work_keys_str_mv AT 51476browningg shootgrowthincoffeaarabica2growthflushingstimulatedbyirrigation
AT 67809fishernm shootgrowthincoffeaarabica2growthflushingstimulatedbyirrigation
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