نتایج جستجو برای: Chilling injury

تعداد نتایج: 320084  

1997
Robert E. Paull

Chaplin, G.R. and K.J. Scott. 1980. Association of calcium in chilling injury susceptibility of stored avocados. HortScience 15:514–515. Chaplin, G.R., R.B.H. Wills, and D. Graham. 1983. Induction of chilling injury in stored avocados with exogenous ethylene. HortScience 18:952–953. Cohen, E. 1988. Commercial use of long-term storage of lemon with intermittent warming. HortScience 23:400. Cohen...

Journal: :علوم باغبانی ایران 0
عبدالحسین ابوطالبی استادیار گروه باغبانی دانشگاه آزاد اسلامی واحد جهرم بهنام بهروزنام استادیار گروه باغبانی دانشگاه آزاد اسلامی واحد جهرم زهرا پشنگه دانشجوی سابق کارشناسی ارشد گروه باغبانی دانشگاه آزاد اسلامی واحد جهرم

the effects of different concentrations of salicylic acid as compared with control and as well with distilled water treatment were assessed on induction of resistance to chilling injury and quality of sweet lemon during its storage. for the purpose, sweet lemon fruits were treated by immersion method for 5 minutes in salicylic acid (200,400 and 600 mg/lit) and then packed in polyethylene bags t...

2010
C. Y. Wang

Chilling injury in tropical and subtropical fruits can be alleviated by low temperature preconditioning, intermittent warming, heat treatment, controlled atmosphere storage, treatments with calcium or other chemicals, waxing, film packaging, genetic modification, or applications with ethylene, abscisic acid, polyamines, methyl jasmonate, methyl salicylate, or other natural compounds. The effect...

2009
W. C. Lin

Excised shoot tips of sweet potato (Ipomoea babatas L.) were incubated in H2O2 or NaCl aqueous solution for 24h or 48h prior to a 3-day chilling at 2.5°C. Severity of chilling injury was visually observed during a post-chilling 7-day recovery at 21°C, and scored at 0 to 5 (none to most severe injury). In the first experiment, when cv. Purple (PUR) sweet potato shoots were subjected to 3-day chi...

2014
Yuan Zou Lin Zhang Shen Rao Xiaoyang Zhu Lanlan Ye Weixin Chen Xueping Li

Papaya (Carica papaya L.) is sensitive to low temperature and easy to be subjected to chilling injury, which causes fruit ripening disorder. This study aimed to investigate the relationship between the expression of genes related to ethylene and fruit ripening disorder caused by chilling injury. Papaya fruits were firstly stored at 7°C and 12°C for 25 and 30 days, respectively, then treated wit...

Journal: :NIPPON SHOKUHIN KAGAKU KOGAKU KAISHI 1996

Journal: :Plant physiology 1971
J M Stewart G Guinn

The effects of chilling at 3 to 5 C on the nucleotide composition of roots and leaves of cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) seedlings were determined. Chilling decreased the concentration of nucleotides, especially di- and triphosphates, in both leaves and roots. Chilling also caused an increase in free nucleosides. The results are interpreted to mean that general phosphorolytic activity is associa...

2000
Mikal E. Saltveit

A number of abiotic shocks (e.g. heat-shock) applied before chilling have previously been shown to increase the chilling tolerance of cucumber and rice seedlings and of tomato fruit. The subsequent rate of radicle growth after chilling of these seedlings is a sensitive measure of chilling injury as is the subsequent increase in ion leakage from chilled discs of tomato pericarp fruit tissue. Dat...

Journal: :Plant physiology 1990
S Hugly P McCourt J Browse G W Patterson C Somerville

A chilling-sensitive mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana was isolated and subjected to genetic, physiological, and biochemical analysis. The chilling-sensitive nature of the mutant line is due to a single recessive nuclear mutation at a locus designated chs1. In contrast to wild-type plants, which are not adversely affected by low temperatures, the chs1 mutant is killed by several days of exposure t...

Journal: :Plant & cell physiology 2008
Kensaku Suzuki Kiyoshi Nagasuga Masumi Okada

Root temperature is found to be a very important factor for leaves to alter the response and susceptibility to chilling stress. Severe visible damage was observed in the most active leaves of seedlings of a japonica rice (Oryza sativa cv. Akitakomachi), e.g. the third leaf at the third-leaf stage, after the treatment where only leaves but not roots were chilled (L/H). On the other hand, no visi...

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