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Plant Physiology 54:899-903 (1974)
© 1974 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Isolation of Flower-inducing and Flower-inhibitory Factors from Aphid Honeydew 1

Charles F. Cleland2

a Biological Laboratories, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138

The aphid Dactynotus ambrosiae Thomas has been allowed to feed on vegetative or flowering plants of the short-day plant Xanthium strumarium L., and the honeydew which they produce is extracted and tested for an effect on flowering using the long-day plant Lemna gibba L., strain G3 for the bioassay. One zone of flower-inducing activity and at least two zones of flower-inhibitory activity are consistently obtained from the honeydew extracts. The levels of flower-inducing and flower-inhibitory activity are not demonstrably different in vegetative and flowering honeydew. The honeydew extracts are inactive on Xanthium but do give some flower induction with the short-day plant Lemna perpusilla Torr., strain 6746. The flower-inducing activity is clearly of plant origin and is present in the phloem since the same active material can be obtained from vegetative or flowering Xanthium by methanol extraction, and honeydew produced by aphids feeding on a chemically defined synthetic diet is completely without flower-inducing activity. This is the first report of successful flower induction in the long-day plant L. gibba G3 by some means other than long-day treatment.


2 Present address: Department of Botany, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514.

1 This research was supported in part by Grant GB 8686 and Grant GB 32895 from the National Science Foundation.




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Copyright © 1974 by the American Society of Plant Biologists