A photoperiod in agriculture is the amount of time each day that a plant spends in daylight.
The higher plants percieve photoperiod by their leaves. The intensity and quality of light determine the duration of photoperiod for inducing flowering.
Photoperiod refers to the duration of light and darkness an organism is exposed to in a 24-hour period. Seasonal breeding and dormancy (such as hibernation in animals or winter dormancy in plants) are two processes that are dependent on photoperiod.
Yes.
crops which can tolerate high temperature and photoperiod is photo-thermo insensitive crop.
photoperiod
photoperiod, temperature, fertility, spacing, disease, pests
Summer Solstice marks the first day of summer (June 21), thus the longest photoperiod of the year. Winter Solstice marks the first day of winter, and the sun reaches it's lowest position in the sky throughout the whole year, so we expierence the shortest photoperiod of the year.
A poinsettia is a Christmas flower.... hope i helped...
Trygve Kristoffersen has written: 'Interactions of photoperiod and temperature' -- subject(s): Tomatoes
Bonnie Marie Bergsma has written: 'The effect of low temperature and continuous photoperiod on the growth of the potato (\\'
Joanne McKinney has written: 'The influence of a light/dark photoperiod on the cell cycle of the freshwater diatom Stephanodiscus hantzschii'
Correct, the photoperiod (the amount of light and darkness a plant receives each day) is a crucial environmental factor that can signal to the plant when to flower or produce fruit. Different plants have specific requirements for the length of light and dark periods they need to initiate flowering or fruiting.