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Circadian regulation of sunflower heliotropism, floral orientation, and pollinator visits

Science, ISSN: 1095-9203, Vol: 353, Issue: 6299, Page: 587-590
2016
  • 200
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 520
    Captures
  • 59
    Mentions
  • 1,416
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    200
  • Captures
    520
  • Mentions
    59
    • News Mentions
      31
      • News
        31
    • Blog Mentions
      15
      • Blog
        15
    • References
      13
      • Wikipedia
        13
  • Social Media
    1,416
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      1,416
      • Facebook
        1,416

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MISSING CONTEXT: This video does not show abnormal sunflower behaviour because of weather…

MISSING CONTEXT: This video does not show abnormal sunflower behaviour because of weather manipulation While young sunflowers do track the sun, mature ones always face east.

Article Description

Young sunflower plants track the Sun from east to west during the day and then reorient during the night to face east in anticipation of dawn. In contrast, mature plants cease movement with their flower heads facing east. We show that circadian regulation of directional growth pathways accounts for both phenomena and leads to increased vegetative biomass and enhanced pollinator visits to flowers. Solar tracking movements are driven by antiphasic patterns of elongation on the east and west sides of the stem. Genes implicated in control of phototropic growth, but not clock genes, are differentially expressed on the opposite sides of solar tracking stems. Thus, interactions between environmental response pathways and the internal circadian oscillator coordinate physiological processes with predictable changes in the environment to influence growth and reproduction.

Bibliographic Details

Atamian, Hagop S; Creux, Nicky M; Brown, Robin Isadora; Garner, Austin G; Blackman, Benjamin K; Harmer, Stacey L

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Multidisciplinary

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