By
Norman Winter Three-foot
tall Country Girl chrysanthemums, six-foot tall Indigo Spire
salvias and five-foot Mexican bush sages should have been
pretty awesome for my garden last year. Unfortunately, there
was not a single bloom despite all the lush green foliage.
The blooms were practically nonexistent on my goldenrods and
Joe Pye weeds, too! With
planting time at hand for chrysanthemums and fall blooming
salvias, I don't want bloom failures to happen to you. Your
bed preparation is critical, but perhaps just as important
is a phenomenon called photoperiodism. My bloom
failure happened as a result of a requested security light.
My security light was placed exactly where I wanted it.
Unfortunately, my order was accidentally duplicated and the
next day another crew showed up and unknowingly filled my
order again. They put the light in the next obvious place,
which happened to be over my perennial garden. The
light looked good in my large back yard, so I left it. I
knew I might see a problem with the chrysanthemums, but the
other bloom failures surprised me. I wasn't able to just
look up a chapter on which plants don't bloom under
streetlights. Photoperiodism
is the growth response of a plant to the length of day, or
more precisely, the length of the light and dark periods.
These responses may include flowering dates, vegetative
growth, and formation of tubers, bulbs, rhizomes and buds.
Most of the plants we grow fall under one of three
categories: short-day, long-day or day-neutral
plants. Short-day
plants are those that initiate flowers only when the day
length is below about 12 hours. The most important
consideration of short-day plants is the long period of
uninterrupted darkness instead of the length of light.
Short-day plants include chrysanthemums, some salvia and
cosmos, angel trumpets (datura) and the
poinsettia. Long-day
plants were believed to start flowering only in day lengths
exceeding 12 hours, but recent thoughts have it tied to set
amounts of darkness instead. Black-eyed Susans (rudbeckias),
hibiscus and flowering tobacco (nicotiana) are popular
long-day plants. Day-neutral
plants have some type of stimulus other than day-length that
initiates the blooming process. One of the most common and
somewhat dreaded day-neutral plants is the dandelion. Many
of our favorite tropical plants are day-neutral. The color
of light also has some effects. Many
gardeners never think about security lights or streetlights
as having a detrimental effect on blooms, but lighting can
be just as important as bed preparation. Look all around and
see if your lights might have a photoperiodic effect on
future perennials you want to establish. If you
buy chrysanthemums to show a little color and then discard
after a season, the streetlight phenomenon will pose no
problem. The problem will occur if you want to keep them for
subsequent years as a perennial. Released:
Aug. 6, 1998 Editor's Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns are within one month of their release. Editors should examine older columns carefully for any information that could be time sensitive.
Southern
Gardening
Beware of
Streetlights' Effect On Fall Bloomers
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Contact: Norman Winter, (601) 857-2284
Visit: DAFVM
|| USDA
Search our Site ||
Need more information about this subject?
Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:43:43
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/sgnews/sg98/sg980806.htm
Mississippi State University
is an equal opportunity institution.
Recommendations on this web site do not endorse
any commercial products or trade names.