Cgn. Turnbull et al., Routes of ethephon uptake in pineapple (Ananas comosus) and reasons for failure of flower induction, J PL GR REG, 18(4), 1999, pp. 145-152
Ethylene-releasing agents such as ethephon (2-chloroethylphosphonic acid) a
re used widely to induce flowering in pineapples (Ananas comosus (L.) Merri
ll), However, ethephon treatment is less reliable in summer, particularly i
f plants are treated on abnormally hot days. [C-14]ethephon was used to fol
low uptake and translocation in leaf tissues. Up to 30% of the ethephon ent
ered the leaf within 4 h, and up to 60% by 24 h. Uptake was dramatically mo
dified by temperature, relative humidity, solution pH, and the surface on w
hich solution droplets were placed. Entry occurred across the leaf cuticle
and probably also by way of stomatal pores, and label was recovered at all
depths within the leaf. C-14 label entered more rapidly through the abaxial
epidermis than through the adaxial epidermis. Low-volume spray application
s to whole plants resulted in rapidly drying droplets mainly on the adaxial
, distal epidermis and were rather ineffective at inducing flowering, possi
bly because Little ethephon or ethylene reaches the shoot apex. High-volume
sprays may facilitate ethephon entry because solution accumulates in leaf
axils and hence remains in prolonged contact with abaxial epidermis of leaf
bases close to the shoot apex. When poured into the center of the plant, 2
0% of a normal commercial ethephon dose induced full flowering even under a
dverse temperatures. It is suggested that high-volume evening spraying and
avoidance of hot days may reduce the incidence of flowering failure.