Three groundnut cultivars were grown in controlled-environment growth chambers at temperature regimes 22/18, 26/22 or 30/26°C, (day/night) under long (12 h, long day) or short (9 h, short day) photoperiods. Total dry matter production (TDM) was 32-72% higher under LD than SD. Temperature × cultivar interaction effects were significant, with the dry matter production being highest at 26/22°C and lowest at 30/26°C and 22/18°C in two of the three cultivars. Leaf area (LA) was greater under LD than SD at all temperature regimes. LA accounted for 76% of the variation in shoot + root dry weight (R² = 0.76, P < 0.01). A lack of relationship between LA and pod weight or pod numbers suggested that the pod development is controlled by factors other t...
Extremes of soil temperature limit yield development of peanut. To obtain information relevant to i...
The extent to which crops are adapted to specific environments greatly depends on how their developm...
The photothermal regulation of phenological development and growth in bambara groundnut ( Vigna subt...
Effect of temperature and photoperiod and their interaction on -plant growth and partitioning of dry...
Effects of temperature x photoperiod interaction on veg-etative atid reproductive growth were examin...
The vegetative and reproductive growth of six groundnut genotypes (Arachis hypogaea L.) in two photo...
In a field experiment conducted during the winter/spring (post-rainy irrigated season) of 1982/83 at...
The physiological basis for responses to daylength of a photoperiod sensitive groundnut genotype (NC...
Photoperiod insensitivity plays a significant role in ensuring wide adaptability of genotypes across...
In the Sudano-Sahelian zone of West Africa there is potential for groundnut (Arachis hypogaea L.) t...
Among abiotic factors, high temperature is one of the major constraints to adaptation of groundnut (...
Heat tolerance of groundnut (Arachis hypogaea L.) was evaluated under field conditions using physiol...
During the rainy season in India, bamboo screens intercepting approximately 46% of the incident ligh...
<p>The extent to which crops are adapted to specific environments greatly depends on how their...
Thirty-six groundnut gentoypes of varied origin were evaluated for their yield, crop growth rates (C...
Extremes of soil temperature limit yield development of peanut. To obtain information relevant to i...
The extent to which crops are adapted to specific environments greatly depends on how their developm...
The photothermal regulation of phenological development and growth in bambara groundnut ( Vigna subt...
Effect of temperature and photoperiod and their interaction on -plant growth and partitioning of dry...
Effects of temperature x photoperiod interaction on veg-etative atid reproductive growth were examin...
The vegetative and reproductive growth of six groundnut genotypes (Arachis hypogaea L.) in two photo...
In a field experiment conducted during the winter/spring (post-rainy irrigated season) of 1982/83 at...
The physiological basis for responses to daylength of a photoperiod sensitive groundnut genotype (NC...
Photoperiod insensitivity plays a significant role in ensuring wide adaptability of genotypes across...
In the Sudano-Sahelian zone of West Africa there is potential for groundnut (Arachis hypogaea L.) t...
Among abiotic factors, high temperature is one of the major constraints to adaptation of groundnut (...
Heat tolerance of groundnut (Arachis hypogaea L.) was evaluated under field conditions using physiol...
During the rainy season in India, bamboo screens intercepting approximately 46% of the incident ligh...
<p>The extent to which crops are adapted to specific environments greatly depends on how their...
Thirty-six groundnut gentoypes of varied origin were evaluated for their yield, crop growth rates (C...
Extremes of soil temperature limit yield development of peanut. To obtain information relevant to i...
The extent to which crops are adapted to specific environments greatly depends on how their developm...
The photothermal regulation of phenological development and growth in bambara groundnut ( Vigna subt...