Effects of Photoperiodism and Other Factors on the Improvement of Pigeonpea Varieties
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How to Cite

Riollano, A. (1964). Effects of Photoperiodism and Other Factors on the Improvement of Pigeonpea Varieties. The Journal of Agriculture of the University of Puerto Rico, 48(3), 232–235. https://doi.org/10.46429/jaupr.v48i3.12989

Abstract

Studies on the effects of photoperiodism and other factors were conducted to obtain information which might be useful in a breeding program with pigeonpeas. The information was sought for accelerating this work in a region where extremes of day-length vary by only 2 hours because of its location in latitude 18°. By shortening the length of day to 8 hours through the use of a darkroom, and planting during the month of February, it was possible to induce flower formation 4 months earlier in two early varieties and 7 weeks earlier in a late variety. However, this short-day treatment did not appreciably affect the time of flower induction in an all-season, or "Totiempo" variety. One-gallon tin-can containers and 10-inch polyethylene bags were found satisfactory for growing pigeonpea plants of different varieties.
https://doi.org/10.46429/jaupr.v48i3.12989
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