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Characterization of Growth-Retardant Effects on Vegetative Growth of Date Palm Seedlings

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Abstract

The leaves, inflorescences, and fruit bunches of date palm trees develop at the crown, which is the apex of a single trunk that can be up to 25 m tall. Because palm trees are monocots, the leaves and inflorescences are generated deep within the trunk from a single meristem—the palm heart—and are inaccessible for direct bioregulator treatments. We followed the effects of two growth regulators, paclobutrazol and uniconazole-P, on the vegetative growth of young date palm seedlings. Both growth regulators constrained the elongation rate of the leaves and reduced the leaf length. Microscopic analysis of dissected palm hearts revealed that the growth retardants did not affect the generation of new leaves. However, the treatments did change the dimensions of the developing embryonic leaves as well as the shape of the apical meristem. The results suggest the possible future use of growth retardants to reduce trunk height, enabling cheaper, safer, and more efficient management of date palm trees.

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Acknowledgments

The project was funded by grant number 203-0475 from the Chief Scientist of the Israeli Ministry of Agriculture and the Israeli Fruit Board. We thank Yosef Riov for helpful suggestions, Hanita Zemach for technical assistance with microscopy, and Chen Karp and Raanan Pumeranc for assistance in greenhouse and field experiments. Contribution number 120/2012 from the Agricultural Research Organization (ARO), The Volcani Center, Bet-Dagan, Israel.

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Correspondence to Yuval Cohen.

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Cohen, Y., Aloni, D.D., Adur, U. et al. Characterization of Growth-Retardant Effects on Vegetative Growth of Date Palm Seedlings. J Plant Growth Regul 32, 533–541 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00344-013-9320-1

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00344-013-9320-1

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