| Literature DB >> 31557246 |
Alfonso Garmendia1, Roberto Beltrán2, Carlos Zornoza3, Francisco J García-Breijo2, José Reig4, Hugo Merle2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In Citrus spp., gibberellic acid (GA) has been proposed to improve different processes related to crop cycle and yield. Accordingly, many studies have been published about how GA affects flowering and fruiting. Nevertheless, some such evidence is contradictory and the use of GA applications by farmers are still confusing and lack the expected results.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31557246 PMCID: PMC6762134 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223147
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Problem scheme according to variety behavior.
| Starting point | from flowering to harvest | End-point | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variety | Behavior | Problem | Solution | Farmers’ goal |
| Productive and non alternate. e.g. Navelina | Adequately adjusting reproductive growth to tree capacity | Variety without problems | Farmers do not need to act in the process | High yield Good quality (size) Stable over years |
| Always unproductive e.g. Orri | Produces few or many flowers bud with low fruit set | Small yield | Farmers must encourage reproductive growth | |
| Always excessively productive e.g. Fine Clementine | Excessive flowers and / or fruit set. | Many small fruits | Farmers must limit reproductive growth | |
| Alternate cv. to a greater or lesser extent, e.g. Nadorcott | Years with good yields: small fruits and exhausted trees | Years with good yields and small size. | Farmers must act to reduce excess | |
non alternate var., variety with constant yield over the years; reproductive growth, production and development of reproductive organs (flowers); exhausted trees, trees with no carbohydrate reserves.
Electronic search strategy.
| Database | Specific search string | Published | Doc type | Lang. | n = |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WoS | THEME: (Gibberellic acid) AND (Citrus) | all years | all | Auto | 463 |
| Scopus | TITLE-ABS-KEY ("Gibberellic acid" AND "Citrus") | all years | all | all | 158 |
| Google Academics | allintitle: Gibberellic acid Citrus | all years | all | all | 130 |
| PubMed | (Gibberellic acid[Title/Abstract]) AND Citrus[Title/Abstract] | all years | all | all | 13 |
| Scielo | All: (Gibberellic acid) AND (Citrus) | all years | all | all | 23 |
Fig 1Overview of the article selection process.
Papers were collected considering the search string in the databases.
Fig 2Classification of the 612 records in 11 groups according to the crop cycle process that GA affected.
Summary of the initial data extraction per process.
Effect of GA on other Citrus development processes. Flowering, Fruit set and yield, and pest and disease groups are not included.
| Many growth regulators have been used in different phases, from callus growth to plant regeneration [ | |
| Most studies clearly showed how gibberellins enhanced seedling growth by increasing leaf number, stem length, internode length, root weight, dry weight, and carbon supply in shoots [ | |
| GA treatments alone or combined with copper have been tested to lower the number of seeds per fruit with limited effectiveness (reduction around 30%) [ | |
| Countless evidence shows that (GA3) applications delay | |
| Treatments likes CaCl2, Ca(NO3)2, Zn, Zn + NAA (naphthaleneacetic acid), NAA, NAA + GA3 and only GA3 have been tested to control creasing [ | |
| The attempts to control alternate cropping used GA to reduce flowering on previous-low-fruit-load trees and PBZ to promote flowering on previous-heavy-fruit-load trees, however the effects were not enough to break the alternate bearing dynamic [ | |
| Gibberellic acid acted similarly in other species as it did in citrus [ | |
| Hotchpotch | Three review articles were found within the search strategy [ |
Fig 3Number of publications per year, from 1959 to 2017.
Fig 4Number of publications per country (A) and per species (B).
Fig 5Characteristics of studies.
Number of publications per application time (A), assay type (B), observation scale (C) and tree age (D). Note: the total number of publications does not necessarily have to be 58 as in some cases, e.g. tree age was not specified, and several observation scales were used in other cases.
Fig 6Number of publications per experimentation years for the 58 publications from 1959 to 2017 with indications of it.
Fig 7The GA concentrations used in the reviewed studies.
For each concentration, the number of publications which used that concentration was noted. Percentages were calculated over the total amount of annotations.
Fig 8Alluvial diagram for the pre-flowering treatment results.
Only the pre-flowering treatment studies were considered. The effect of GA pre-flowering treatments on flowering, fruit set and yield for each reviewed publication was noted as follows: N, no effect; I, increase; D, decrease; O, not studied and V, variable result. Bandwidth reflects the number of publications. The narrowest bandwidth represents a single publication. Red denotes the articles in which GA decreased flowering, while gray denotes the articles in which GA had a different effect.
Fig 9Alluvial diagram for the results of treatments done at full bloom or some weeks later.
Only the studies with treatments at full bloom or some weeks later were considered. The effect of GA at full bloom on flowering, fruit set and yield for each reviewed publication was noted as follows: N, no effect; I, increase; D, decrease; O, not studied and V, variable results. Bandwidth reflects the number of publications. The narrowest bandwidth represents a single publication. Green denotes the articles in which GA increased fruit set, while gray denotes the articles in which GA had a different effect.