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Keywords = “bud jumping” phenomenon

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18 pages, 3989 KB  
Article
Morphological Analysis, Bud Differentiation, and Regulation of “Bud Jumping” Phenomenon in Oncidium Using Plant Growth Regulators
by Hanqiao Lan, Le Liu, Weishi Li, Daicheng Hao, Shanzhi Lin, Beilei Ye, Minqiang Tang and Peng Ling
Horticulturae 2025, 11(7), 852; https://doi.org/10.3390/horticulturae11070852 - 18 Jul 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1156
Abstract
Oncidium has an important market value, with important high-grade cut orchids and potted flowers on the flower market. In the Oncidium cut flowers production industry, there is a common phenomenon that the development of vegetative buds disrupts the normal generation cycle of the [...] Read more.
Oncidium has an important market value, with important high-grade cut orchids and potted flowers on the flower market. In the Oncidium cut flowers production industry, there is a common phenomenon that the development of vegetative buds disrupts the normal generation cycle of the inflorescence induction, so-called “bud jumping”. In this study, vegetative bud differentiation and flower bud differentiation were divided into three stages, namely, the initial stage of differentiation, the leaf primordial/flower primordial differentiation stage, and the late stage of leaf bud/flower bud differentiation, as observed by paraffin sectioning. Secondly, we analyzed the differences between the vegetative buds of “bud jumping” plants and the flower buds of normal flowering plants by transcriptome sequencing. The transcriptome analysis results revealed significant differences among plant signaling pathways, particularly in gibberellins, auxins, and cytokinins, which play important roles in this phenomenon’s formation. In conjunction with the transcriptome analysis, the researchers conducted field experiments by applying plant growth regulators on the newborn pseudobulb of young Oncidium plants measuring approximately 49 mm in length. The results showed that the treatment groups of 100 mg/L of gibberellic acid (GA3) and 100 mg/L GA3 + 10 mg/L 6-Benziladenine (6-BA) exhibited the highest rate of flower bud differentiation instead of the least “bud jumping” phenomenon, and the “bud jumping” phenomenon was significantly reduced under 25 mg/L, 50 mg/L, and 75 mg/L 3-indoleacetic acid (IAA) treatments. The application of exogenous gibberellins, cytokinins, and auxins can effectively reduce the occurrence of “bud jumping”. Full article
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