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Controlled-temperature effects on cotton yield and fibre properties

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 June 1998

A. LIAKATAS
Affiliation:
Agricultural University of Athens, Department of Land Reclamation and Agricultural Engineering, 75 Iera Odos, GR-118 55, Athens, Greece
D. ROUSSOPOULOS
Affiliation:
Hellenic Cotton Board, 150 Sygrou Ave, GR-176 71, Athens, Greece
W. J. WHITTINGTON
Affiliation:
University of Nottingham, School of Biological Sciences, Sutton Bonington Campus, Loughborough, Leics LE12 5RD, UK

Abstract

Temperature effects on cotton yield and fibre properties of three cotton cultivars were determined. Plants were grown in pots maintained in growth rooms at varying day and night temperatures representing seasonally constant or varying (C) or daily varying (V) regimes.

Yield and fibre characters responded to variation of daily mean and amplitude of temperature. Mean temperature reduction improved yield components, but fibre length, uniformity, strength and micronaire were increased by high, particularly high day, temperatures. A large daily temperature amplitude produced an intermediate number of flowers and the lowest retention percentage.

Fruiting and yield were increased by reduction in temperature down to the threshold mean temperature of 22°C. However, V-regimes with a low minimum temperature acted as a further drop (below 22°C) of temperature and adversely affected these characters. An adverse effect of low minimum temperature combined with a moderate day temperature was observed also on lint percentage and fibre properties.

Varietal differences were more pronounced for highly heritable characters such as fibre properties, for which significant interactions between varieties and temperature also occurred. Differences in reproductive development were not sufficient to be of much practical importance.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1998 Cambridge University Press

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