Monitoring Seasonal Bud Set, Bud Burst, and Cold Hardiness in Populus. Johansson, M., Takata, N., Ibáñez, C., & Eriksson, M. E. In Staiger, D., Davis, S., & Davis, A. M., editors, Plant Circadian Networks: Methods and Protocols, of Methods in Molecular Biology, pages 215–226. Springer US, New York, NY, January, 2022.
Monitoring Seasonal Bud Set, Bud Burst, and Cold Hardiness in Populus [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   2 downloads  
Using a perennial model plant allows the study of reoccurring seasonal events in a way that is not possible using a fast-growing annual such as A. thaliana (Arabidopsis). In this study, we present a hybrid aspen (Populus tremula × P. tremuloides) as our perennial model plant. These plants can be grown in growth chambers to shorten growth periods and manipulate day length and temperature in ways that would be impossible under natural conditions. In addition, the use of growth chambers allows easy monitoring of height and diameter expansion, accelerating the collection of data from new strategies that allow evaluation of promoters or inhibitors of growth. Here, we describe how to study and quantify responses to seasonal changes (mainly using P. tremula × P. tremuloides) by measuring growth rate and key events under different photoperiodic cycles.
@incollection{johansson_monitoring_2022,
	address = {New York, NY},
	series = {Methods in {Molecular} {Biology}},
	title = {Monitoring {Seasonal} {Bud} {Set}, {Bud} {Burst}, and {Cold} {Hardiness} in {Populus}},
	isbn = {978-1-07-161912-4},
	url = {https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-1912-4_17},
	abstract = {Using a perennial model plant allows the study of reoccurring seasonal events in a way that is not possible using a fast-growing annual such as A. thaliana (Arabidopsis). In this study, we present a hybrid aspen (Populus tremula × P. tremuloides) as our perennial model plant. These plants can be grown in growth chambers to shorten growth periods and manipulate day length and temperature in ways that would be impossible under natural conditions. In addition, the use of growth chambers allows easy monitoring of height and diameter expansion, accelerating the collection of data from new strategies that allow evaluation of promoters or inhibitors of growth. Here, we describe how to study and quantify responses to seasonal changes (mainly using P. tremula × P. tremuloides) by measuring growth rate and key events under different photoperiodic cycles.},
	language = {en},
	urldate = {2021-12-01},
	booktitle = {Plant {Circadian} {Networks}: {Methods} and {Protocols}},
	publisher = {Springer US},
	author = {Johansson, Mikael and Takata, Naoki and Ibáñez, Cristian and Eriksson, Maria E.},
	editor = {Staiger, Dorothee and Davis, Seth and Davis, Amanda Melaragno},
	month = jan,
	year = {2022},
	keywords = {Bud burst, Bud set, Cold acclimation, Critical day length, Freezing tolerance, Perennial, Photoperiod, Populus},
	pages = {215--226},
}

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