Hormonal extracts of cherry tomato fruits (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) cv. Small Fry at different stages of fruit development and maturation were bioassayed for their auxin, gibberellin, cytokinin and growth inhibitor activities. In general, the levels of endogenous growth promoters were much higher in the young developing fruits than in the more mature fruits. Free cytokinin levels were highest in the first two weeks of development then declined rapidly. However, cytokinin activity in the ribotide fraction, after treatment with alkaline phosphatase, decreased during thefirst three weeks of development then increased rapidly over the following four weeks. Auxin levels increased during early development to reach a maximum in three‐week‐old fruits after anthesis. Gibberellin levels during the first two weeks of development were much lower than those of auxins and cytokinins, but then increased to reach a peak in the fourth week after anthesis.
A growth inhibiting substance with Rf similar to that of abscisic acid was found in the acidic fraction of the fruit extracts. This inhibitor increased gradually during fruit growth and development and reached a peak at the age of five weeks which coincides with the green mature stage.
Cabbage and collards grown in pots in municipal sludge amended soil accumulated cadmium. Glutathione content of both young and old leaves was significantly higher in the sludge-grown vegetables than in the corresponding control plants, likely in response to stress factors imposed by the sludge amendment. Putrescine, spermidine, and spermine, measured only in the collards, also increased, possibly by induction due to cadmium accumulation or to general metal stress. Cabbage loopers foraging on the sludge-grown plants assimilated and concentrated cadmium from the contaminated foliage. Putrescine, spermidine, and spermine also increased in the loopers associated,with the collards whereas glutathione did not. The inseds grew larger but developed more slowly on the sludge-grown collards than on the corresponding control plants. Possible accumulation of cadmium in insects by insect-consuming birds is discussed.
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