Pa. Omanga et al., FLOWERING IN PIGEONPEA (CAJANUS-CAJAN) IN KENYA - RESPONSES OF MEDIUM-MATURING AND LATE-MATURING GENOTYPES TO LOCATION AND DATE OF SOWING, Experimental Agriculture, 32(2), 1996, pp. 111-128
The effects of temperature and photoperiod on times From sowing to flo
wering (f) were investigated in medium- and late-maturing pigeonpea (C
ajanus cajan). Twelve genotypes were sown in two seasons at seven site
s in Kenya, covering latitudes 0-4 degrees S and a wide range of altit
udes (50-2000 m), as well as under polythene enclosures constructed at
six sites to create warmer temperature regimes (a total of 26 environ
ments). The same genotypes were also sown at monthly intervals and in
an artificially extended photoperiod (in the open as well as under pol
ythene) created by incandescent lamps suspended above the plots at Kat
umani (1 degrees 30'S). Times from sowing to flowering varied from 70
to more than 300 days and were associated with variations in mean pre-
flowering values of temperature and photoperiod which ranged from 15.2
degrees to 32.7 degrees C and from 12.6 to 15.0 h d(-1). Genotypic va
riation in f in the most inductive regimes (a mean pre-flowering tempe
rature of 24.3 degrees C for the medium- and 20.8 degrees C for the la
te-maturing genotypes, combined with a mean pre-flowering photoperiod
of 12.6 and 12.8 h d(-1)) ranged from 70 and 76 days and from 85 to 11
2 days, respectively. There were no photoperiodic effects on f over th
e range from 12.6 to 13.1 h d(-1), but the artificially extended day d
elayed flowering, especially in the late-maturing genotypes. The relat
ion between 1/f and the mean pre-flowering temperature was linear belo
w and above an optimum temperature, T-o. The genotype-specific paramet
ers derived from these thermal linear rate models based on flowering r
esponses in 26 environments closely predicted 1/f and therefore f in i
n an independent sequence of monthly sowings. It was thus responses to
temperature below and above T-o, and not responses to daylength which
modulated flowering throughout the wide range of natural environments
tested within this vast country, even in the late-maturing and most p
hotoperiod-sensitive genotypes.