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Original Articles

Photoperiodic history affects the critical daylength of the short-day plant Acrosymphyton purpuriferum (Rhodophyta)

Pages 157-160 | Received 07 Dec 1992, Accepted 08 Apr 1993, Published online: 17 Dec 2010
 

Abstract

The crustose tetrasporophyte of the red alga Acrosymphyton purpuriferum is a qualitative short-day plant in the formation of its tetrasporangia. The critical daylength for the response was determined in plants precultured in various long-day regimes [20:4, 18:6, 16:8 and 14:10 (L:D, h)]. There was a strong influence of photoperiodic history. The sharper the decrease in daylength the stronger and faster the plants responded. The critical daylength (daylength inducing 50% response) increased from 9·5 h for plants precultured in 14 h days to 12·5 h for plants precultured in 20 h days. Acrosymphyton thus responds to a change in daylength, rather than to a fixed critical value. This is of adaptive significance in synchronising the onset of reproduction throughout its broad depth range in the subtidal region.

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