The Horticulture Journal
Online ISSN : 2189-0110
Print ISSN : 2189-0102
ISSN-L : 2189-0102
INVITED REVIEWS
Control of Flowering and Runnering in Strawberry
Timo HytönenTakeshi Kurokura
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2020 Volume 89 Issue 2 Pages 96-107

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Abstract

Strawberry flowering physiology has engaged the interest of researchers for almost a century after the initial reports demonstrating the photoperiodic control of flowering and vegetative reproduction through stolons called runners. Most strawberries possess a seasonal flowering habit with flower initiation occurring under short days in autumn and flowering during the following spring. Also perpetual flowering genotypes are known in diploid woodland strawberry (Fragaria vesca L.) and octoploid garden strawberry (F. × ananassa Duch.), and recent research have shown that this trait has evolved independently in different species. Studies in the perpetual flowering mutant of woodland strawberry led to the identification of TERMINAL FLOWER1 (FvTFL1) as a major floral repressor causing the seasonal flowering habit in this species and demonstrated that recessive mutation in this gene leads to perpetual flowering. This breakthrough opened an avenue for molecular understanding on the control of flowering by different environmental signals. Different loci control perpetual flowering in garden strawberry including one dominant major locus and additional environmentally regulated epistatic loci. The major gene is called Perpetual Flowering Runnering (PFRU) because it also reduces the number of runners. Growth regulator applications initially demonstrated the role of gibberellin in the control of runner formation, and molecular understanding on the role of gibberellin biosynthesis and signaling in this process has started to emerge. Here, we present current understanding and major open questions on the control of flowering and runnering in strawberries. In order to understand the control of flowering in the context of perennial growth cycle, we also discuss current knowledge on the control of dormancy.

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