juvenile phase
Non seasonal flowering could mean two things: The plant is flowering outside of its normal flowering period. For example where Chrysanthemums are "forced" to flower outside of summer. Another meaning could be with respect to the term "seasonal"; annual plants are sometimes called seasonal, so non-seasonal plant could mean that its a perennial plant.
The rose and the daffodil are two different plants, even though they are both flowering dicots. The rose is a woody perennial and the daffodil is a herbaceous perennial. The herbaceous plant will always grow faster than the woody one, and the daffodil will have a short growth/flowering period, followed by dormancy and regrowth the next growing season.
Hi,The interflowering period represents the time period between two consecutive flowering. The plants which flower more than once , their interflowering period represents juvenile phase . Although they pass mature phase on flowering for the first time. But for flowering for the next time they require further development.
Flowering plants arrived in the Cretaceous period of the Mesozoic Era.
Plants that enter a period of reproduction more than once are called perennials. Some perennial plants live for a very long time.
The period of daylight, specific in length for any given species, that appears to initiate flowering in *long-day plants or inhibit flowering in *short-day plants. In actual fact long-day plants will not flower if the dark period exceeds a certain maximum and conversely short-day plants will not flower unless the dark period exceeds a certain minimum. These periods are termed critical dark periods and must be continuous to have effect (see night-break effect ).
Yes, cyclamen can rebloom after the initial flowering period if they are properly cared for and provided with the right conditions.
In perennial irrigation system water required for irrigation is supplied in accordance with the crop requirement througout the crop period.
In the Cretaceous period.
Short day plants require a longer period of darkness to flower, while long day plants need more hours of daylight to bloom. This difference in light exposure affects their growth and flowering patterns.
Renaissance.
Short day plants require uninterrupted darkness to initiate flowering. If they receive flashes of light during their dark period, this can interrupt the critical dark period and prevent flowering from occurring. The light exposure can reset their internal biological clock, causing confusion and delaying the flowering process.