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  2. Photoperiodism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photoperiodism

    [3] [4] Photoperiodic flowering plants are classified as long-day plants or short-day plants even though night is the critical factor because of the initial misunderstanding about daylight being the controlling factor. Along with long-day plants and short-day plants, there are plants that fall into a "dual-day length category".

  3. Florigen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florigen

    Anton Lang showed that several long-day plants and biennials could be made to flower by treatment with gibberellin, even when grown under a non-flower-inducing (or non-inducing) photoperiod. This led to the suggestion that florigen may be made up of two classes of flowering hormones: Gibberellins and Anthesins. [ 18 ]

  4. ELF3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ELF3

    In the long day facultative plant Arabidopsis, ELF3 is a key inhibitor of photoperiodic flowering when plants are grown in non-inductive environmental conditions. [1] The EC represses the expression of GI, a positive regulator of flowering, in the early night by binding to the GI promoter and preventing its activation. [2]

  5. Photomorphogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photomorphogenesis

    As a result, photoperiodic plants only start making flowers when the days have reached a "critical daylength," allowing these plants to initiate their flowering period according to the time of year. For example, "long day" plants need long days to start flowering, and "short day" plants need to experience short days before they will start ...

  6. Erwin Bünning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erwin_Bünning

    By entraining the plants to a spring or summer photoperiod, Bünning was able to induce flowering, even if the actual season were fall or winter. [8] [10] From his results, Bünning proposed that biological clocks have sensors for both light and dark, and their relationship aids photoperiodic timekeeping. [11]

  7. Pseudo-response regulator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudo-response_regulator

    Pseudo-response regulator (PRR) refers to a group of genes that regulate the circadian oscillator in plants. There are four primary PRR proteins (PRR9, PRR7, PRR5 and TOC1/PRR1) that perform the majority of interactions with other proteins within the circadian oscillator, and another (PRR3) that has limited function.

  8. Salvia hispanica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salvia_hispanica

    S. hispanica is a short-day flowering plant, [14] indicating its photoperiodic sensitivity and lack of photoperiodic variability in traditional cultivars, which has limited commercial use of chia seeds to tropical and subtropical latitudes until 2012. [15]

  9. Asparagus setaceus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asparagus_setaceus

    Asparagus setaceus, with the common names of common asparagus fern, asparagus grass, [2] lace fern, climbing asparagus, or ferny asparagus, is a climbing plant in the family Asparagaceae native to southern Africa. [3] Despite its common name, the plant is not a true fern, but has leaves that resemble one. [4]

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