The understanding of the interaction between thermo-photoperiodic conditions
and the genetic control of anthesis date is fundamental in explaining the
environmental adaptation of durum wheat and triticale cultivars. The
development of 8 durum wheat (Triticum turgidum L. var.durum) and 2 triticale
(x Triticosecale Wittmack) cultivars was studied at
3 sowing dates (September, November, and March) by observations on apex
development, number and rate of leaf appearance, spike fertility, and number
and length of elongated internodes.
Variation in anthesis date was mostly explained by the total number of leaves,
which ranged between 8.3 and 15, and hence by the duration of the phase of
leaf primordium production. Total leaf number also affected the length of the
subsequent phase until flag leaf appearance. The phyllochron was influenced by
both sowing date and genotype, and was minimum in the March sowing (87
degree-days). The genotypic variability in phyllochron was due either to the
variations in leaf number or to genotypic intrinsic differences. Time to
terminal spikelet stage was related to the number of spikelets per spike and
to the number of elongated internodes, although stem length depended more on
internode length than on internode number. The number of spikelets per spike
was associated with leaf number, but their relationship was affected by the
thermal conditions during spikelet primordium initiation. No differences were
observed between wheat and triticale cultivars, apart from the number of
spikelets per spike