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William P. Jacobs, Comparison of Photoperiodic Sensitivity of Green-Leafed and Red-Leafed Perilla , Plant Physiology, Volume 70, Issue 1, July 1982, Pages 303–306, https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.70.1.303
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Abstract
The flowering responses of Perilla frutescens (L.) Britt. (green-leafed Perilla) and P. crispa (Thunb.) Tanaka (red-leafed Perilla) to different 24-hour photoperiodic regimes were compared quantitatively. Although both taxa are short-day plants, P. frutescens was less strict in its short-day requirement, forming macroscopically visible inflorescence primordia and open flowers even in continuous light after 77 to 85 and 132 days, respectively, compared to 12 and 22 days in 8-hour days. P. crispa took only 4 days longer to reach the same stages in 8-hour short days, but exhibited a sharply defined critical day-length between 14 and 16 hours. Two-hour light-breaks in the middle of a 16-hour night were more effective in inhibiting floral development in P. crispa than in P. frutescens, for which they had a small effect compared to true long-days, particularly on the formation of inflorescence primordia. The number of short days needed to obtain the flowering in P. frutescens plants raised in continuous light decreased in a linear manner with the age of the plants upon transfer to short days.
In memory of William Hillman, among whose many papers on flowering were some on flowering of Coleus, another member of the Labiatae.
Supported by funds provided by Eugene Higgins Trust Fund to the Biology Department.