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Encyclopedia > Photoperiodism

Photoperiodicity is the physiological reaction of organisms to the length of day or night. It occurs in animals and plants. Phyla Subregnum Parazoa Porifera (sponges) Subregnum Agnotozoa Placozoa (trichoplax) Orthonectida (orthonectids) Rhombozoa (dicyemids) Subregnum Eumetazoa Radiata (unranked) (radial symmetry) Ctenophora (comb jellies) Cnidaria (coral, jellyfish, anemones) Bilateria (unranked) (bilateral symmetry) Acoelomorpha (basal) Orthonectida (parasitic to flatworms, echinoderms, etc. ... Divisions Land plants (embryophytes) Non-vascular plants (bryophytes) Marchantiophyta - liverworts Anthocerotophyta - hornworts Bryophyta - mosses Vascular plants (tracheophytes) Lycopodiophyta - clubmosses Equisetophyta - horsetails Pteridophyta - true ferns Psilotophyta - whisk ferns Ophioglossophyta - adderstongues Seed plants (spermatophytes) †Pteridospermatophyta - seed ferns Pinophyta - conifers Cycadophyta - cycads Ginkgophyta - ginkgo Gnetophyta - gnetae Magnoliophyta - flowering plants Adiantum pedatum (a fern...


Many flowering plants use the pigment phytochrome to sense seasonal changes in day length, which they take as signals to flower. Broadly, flowering plants can be classified as long day plants, short day plants, or day neutral plants. They were classified with these names, now known to be fallacious, because they observed the following: Classes Magnoliopsida- Dicots Liliopsida- Monocots The flowering plants (also called angiosperms) are a major group of land plants. ... In biology, pigment is any material resulting in color in plant or animal cells which is the result of selective absorption. ... Phytochrome is a photoreceptor, a pigment that plants use to detect light. ... A long day plant is a plant that requires less than a certain number of hours of night in each 24 hour period to induce flowering. ... A short day plant is a plant that cannot flower under the long days of summer. ... A day neutral plant does not require a specific day length to flower. ...


Long day plants require a certain amount of daylight to initiate flowering, so these plants flower in the spring or summer. Conversely, short day plants will flower when the length of daylight falls below a certain amount. Day neutral plants do not initiate flowering based on photoperiodism; some may use temperature (vernalization) instead. This article contains information that has not been verified and thus might not be reliable. ...


However, it was later found that long day plants are in fact really "short night plants", and short day plants are really "long night plants". This was experimentally determined in the following way: Two short day plants were placed in regulated conditions of light and dark. One plant received a short pulse of red light in the middle of the night, while the other was left undisturbed during the dark. The one which received the light did not flower. There was a set of similar experiments performed on long day plants, and these proved to also be regulated by the dark, not the light. A long day plant is a plant that requires less than a certain number of hours of night in each 24 hour period to induce flowering. ... A short day plant is a plant that cannot flower under the long days of summer. ... A short day plant is a plant that cannot flower under the long days of summer. ... A long day plant is a plant that requires less than a certain number of hours of night in each 24 hour period to induce flowering. ...


Also, the regulation by dark makes more logical sense. The dark is unlikely to be interrupted in nature--the only things that will do this are lightning strikes, fire, or fireflies. However, almost anything can cast a shadow over the flower, which would break its day period up.


Phytochrome is converted to its active form by red light (660 nm), and its inactive form by far-red light (730 nm). Moonlight produces a greater percentage of far-red light than sunlight, so during the night the phytochrome is slowly converted to its inactive form. More phytochrome is converted in a longer night, allowing the plant to measure the length of the night.


Other instances of photoperiodism in plants include the growth of stems or roots during certain seasons, or the loss of leaves.


Some birds use photoperiodism to prepare for a migration or for the cold of winter. In some mammals, the time of estrus is regulated by photoperiod. Orders Many - see section below. ... Orders Subclass Multituberculata (extinct) Plagiaulacida Cimolodonta Subclass Palaeoryctoides (extinct) Subclass Triconodonta (extinct) Subclass Eutheria (includes extinct ancestors)/Placentalia (excludes extinct ancestors) Afrosoricida Artiodactyla Carnivora Cetacea Chiroptera Cimolesta (extinct) Creodonta (extinct) Condylarthra (extinct) Dermoptera Desmostylia (extinct) Dinocerata (extinct) Embrithopoda (extinct) Hyracoidea Insectivora Lagomorpha Litopterna (extinct) Macroscelidea Mesonychia (extinct) Notoungulata (extinct) Perissodactyla... Estrus (also spelled œstrus) or heat in female mammals is the period of greatest female sexual responsiveness usually coinciding with ovulation. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Frontiers in Zoology | Full text | Control of annual reproductive cycle in the subtropical house sparrow (Passer ... (7447 words)
The role of day length (=photoperiod) in control of the initiation and termination of events associated with seasonal reproduction is shown in a number of species breeding both at high and low latitudes [for references see [1-9]].
The photoperiodic entrainment of the circadian rhythmicity, which can be different under different zeitgeber conditions, sets the timing of the photoinductible phase [60], and the interaction of the latter with the light regulates gonad development cycle in photoperiodic birds [12,31-33].
It appears that increasing photoperiods induce initial slow growth phase and not the final fast or exponential growth phase of ovary, which is influenced by supplementary factors [1,43]; full reproductive competence in females is often determined by the stimuli from mate, nest site and food availability [8,61-63].
Photoperiodic information acquired and stored in vivo is retained in vitro by a circadian oscillator, the avian pineal ... (3643 words)
Photoperiodic information acquired and stored in vivo is retained in vitro by a circadian oscillator, the avian pineal gland -- Brandstätter et al.
Photoperiodic information acquired and stored in vivo is retained in vitro by a circadian oscillator, the avian pineal gland
Photoperiodic patterns imposed on house sparrows during in vivo synchronization additionally modulated in vitro melatonin
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