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Functional Plant Biology Functional Plant Biology Society
Plant function and evolutionary biology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

The Role of Ethylene in Abscission of Cling Peach Fruit

PH Jerie

Australian Journal of Plant Physiology 3(6) 747 - 754
Published: 1976

Abstract

Ethylene production was measured in fruit of a number of cling peach cultivars within 1 h of picking. During the period when ethylene production on the tree was rising exponentially, fruit from cultivars with low preharvest drop produced ethylene at much lower rates than fruit from high-drop cultivars. Also, the ethylene peak tended to occur earlier relative to flesh colouring in high-drop cultivars. The level of endogenous ethylene controlled the rate of abscission, which was retarded by holding the fruit in an atmosphere of 15% CO*2. Abscission was accelerated by injection of (2-chloroethyl)- phosphonic acid, but the cultivars Golden Queen and Phillips, and an unnamed cultivar, differed from each other in their sensitivity.

https://doi.org/10.1071/PP9760747

© CSIRO 1976

Committee on Publication Ethics


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