Impact of apex pinching on Vanilla planifolia flowering

Vanilla planifolia vines typically start flowering three years after planting. It is accepted that flowering is triggered by stresses i.e. low temperatures, drought, light, physiological disturbances such as the pinching of hanging stems apices (decapitation). However, the determinism of flowering remains little studied and cultural practices aimed at promoting flowering are mainly based on empirical observations. The objective of this work was to study the effectiveness of decapitation to promote flowering. A trial was conducted on 180 V. planifolia plants grown under shade house in Mauritius for three productions cycles. Decapitation was performed on 120 plants (on 1 to 7 hanging stems per plants). The rest were kept as controls. 84% of the inflorescences occurred on hanging stems. In cycles 2 and 3 the probability of flowering was five and three times higher, respectively, for decapitated stems compared to undecapitated ones. Additionally, decapitated stems tend to produce a slightly higher number of inflorescences than non-decapitated stems: 2.5 versus 2 inflorescences/stem. We also showed a delayed effect of apex pinching on flowering: the rate of decapitated stems setting flowers was 3.7 times higher after two years than after one year. Therefore, in our conditions, decapitation significantly promotes the flowering of V. planifolia. However, further work should clarify the best date for pinching and its transferability to other conditions.

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Main Authors: Daguenet, Charlotte, Chiroleu, Frédéric, Grisoni, Michel, Guimbeau, Alizée, Dedours, Amaury, Fock-Bastide, Isabelle
Format: conference_item biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Université de la Réunion
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/609787/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/609787/1/609787.pdf
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spelling dig-cirad-fr-6097872024-06-25T10:33:07Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/609787/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/609787/ Impact of apex pinching on Vanilla planifolia flowering. Daguenet Charlotte, Chiroleu Frédéric, Grisoni Michel, Guimbeau Alizée, Dedours Amaury, Fock-Bastide Isabelle. 2024. In : Book of abstracts, 5th International Vanilla Congress, 4-7 June 2024, Reunion Island, France. CIRAD, Université de la Réunion. Saint-Pierre : Université de la Réunion, Résumé, p. 40. International Vanilla Congress (IVC 2024). 5, Saint-Pierre, Réunion, 4 Juin 2024/7 Juin 2024. Impact of apex pinching on Vanilla planifolia flowering Daguenet, Charlotte Chiroleu, Frédéric Grisoni, Michel Guimbeau, Alizée Dedours, Amaury Fock-Bastide, Isabelle eng 2024 Université de la Réunion Book of abstracts, 5th International Vanilla Congress, 4-7 June 2024, Reunion Island, France Vanilla planifolia vines typically start flowering three years after planting. It is accepted that flowering is triggered by stresses i.e. low temperatures, drought, light, physiological disturbances such as the pinching of hanging stems apices (decapitation). However, the determinism of flowering remains little studied and cultural practices aimed at promoting flowering are mainly based on empirical observations. The objective of this work was to study the effectiveness of decapitation to promote flowering. A trial was conducted on 180 V. planifolia plants grown under shade house in Mauritius for three productions cycles. Decapitation was performed on 120 plants (on 1 to 7 hanging stems per plants). The rest were kept as controls. 84% of the inflorescences occurred on hanging stems. In cycles 2 and 3 the probability of flowering was five and three times higher, respectively, for decapitated stems compared to undecapitated ones. Additionally, decapitated stems tend to produce a slightly higher number of inflorescences than non-decapitated stems: 2.5 versus 2 inflorescences/stem. We also showed a delayed effect of apex pinching on flowering: the rate of decapitated stems setting flowers was 3.7 times higher after two years than after one year. Therefore, in our conditions, decapitation significantly promotes the flowering of V. planifolia. However, further work should clarify the best date for pinching and its transferability to other conditions. conference_item info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion http://agritrop.cirad.fr/609787/1/609787.pdf text Cirad license info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess https://agritrop.cirad.fr/mention_legale.html http://agritrop.cirad.fr/609709/
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collection DSpace
country Francia
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libraryname Biblioteca del CIRAD Francia
language eng
description Vanilla planifolia vines typically start flowering three years after planting. It is accepted that flowering is triggered by stresses i.e. low temperatures, drought, light, physiological disturbances such as the pinching of hanging stems apices (decapitation). However, the determinism of flowering remains little studied and cultural practices aimed at promoting flowering are mainly based on empirical observations. The objective of this work was to study the effectiveness of decapitation to promote flowering. A trial was conducted on 180 V. planifolia plants grown under shade house in Mauritius for three productions cycles. Decapitation was performed on 120 plants (on 1 to 7 hanging stems per plants). The rest were kept as controls. 84% of the inflorescences occurred on hanging stems. In cycles 2 and 3 the probability of flowering was five and three times higher, respectively, for decapitated stems compared to undecapitated ones. Additionally, decapitated stems tend to produce a slightly higher number of inflorescences than non-decapitated stems: 2.5 versus 2 inflorescences/stem. We also showed a delayed effect of apex pinching on flowering: the rate of decapitated stems setting flowers was 3.7 times higher after two years than after one year. Therefore, in our conditions, decapitation significantly promotes the flowering of V. planifolia. However, further work should clarify the best date for pinching and its transferability to other conditions.
format conference_item
author Daguenet, Charlotte
Chiroleu, Frédéric
Grisoni, Michel
Guimbeau, Alizée
Dedours, Amaury
Fock-Bastide, Isabelle
spellingShingle Daguenet, Charlotte
Chiroleu, Frédéric
Grisoni, Michel
Guimbeau, Alizée
Dedours, Amaury
Fock-Bastide, Isabelle
Impact of apex pinching on Vanilla planifolia flowering
author_facet Daguenet, Charlotte
Chiroleu, Frédéric
Grisoni, Michel
Guimbeau, Alizée
Dedours, Amaury
Fock-Bastide, Isabelle
author_sort Daguenet, Charlotte
title Impact of apex pinching on Vanilla planifolia flowering
title_short Impact of apex pinching on Vanilla planifolia flowering
title_full Impact of apex pinching on Vanilla planifolia flowering
title_fullStr Impact of apex pinching on Vanilla planifolia flowering
title_full_unstemmed Impact of apex pinching on Vanilla planifolia flowering
title_sort impact of apex pinching on vanilla planifolia flowering
publisher Université de la Réunion
url http://agritrop.cirad.fr/609787/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/609787/1/609787.pdf
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