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Articles

ROLE OF STEM CUT-SURFACE IN CUT-ROSE PERFORMANCE

Article number
181_47
Pages
359 – 364
Language
Abstract
Performance of cut roses standing in plain water, as evident from visual appearance, and characterized by diurnal water turnover, diurnal weight fluctuation and long-term fresh-weight pattern, is to be interpreted as the result of an easily disturbed balance between diminishing water-uptake capacity and concomitant stomate-controlled transpiration.

The following observations show that the very cut-surface of the stem plays an important role in the diminishing water-uptake capacity:

  • During vase-life, resistance to water flow through stem segments increases, predominantly in the lowermost 1 cm of stem.

  • Cooling the lower end of the stem to 0°C, with leaves and flower exposed to high light intensity and normal temperature (20°C), markedly improves performance, fresh-weight evolution and water turnover.

  • Cooling the lowermost 2 ½ cm portion of stem, including the cut-surface, has more effect than cooling a 5 cm portion a little higher up the stem but leaving the cut-surface at 20°C.

  • Daily repeated, one-minute exposure of the stem base to 0.1 % silver nitrate likewise improves performance.

  • Elimination of cut-end uptake, and substituting lateral uptake for it, via bark-stripped lengths of stem, results in a low but nearly constant level of water turnover, and good performance.

Time-series of scanning electron micrographs show that the cut-surface very quickly becomes the site of prolific bacterial and fungal growth, in spite of the vase water staying clear and having a low level of microbial contamination.

Although the abundant presence of bacteria and fungal growth on the cut-surface is very suggestive of a primarily microbial explanation for diminishing water uptake, there is no decisive evidence yet in favour of either a micro-organismal or physiological interpretation.
Cooling lowers both kinds of activities.
Silver effects can result from disinfection, but also from anti-(wound)-ethylene action.
SEM-evidence of caked (and desiccated) bacterial deposits and fungal mats is no conclusive proof of water-impenetrability in the live situation (cf. deposits of Al(OH)3 precipitate, other paper of ours in this volume).

Publication
Authors
H.C.M. de Stigter, A.G.M. Broekhuysen
Keywords
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