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short-day
[ shawrt-dey ]
adjective
- requiring a short photoperiod.
short-day
adjective
- (of plants) able to flower only if exposed to short periods of daylight (less than 12 hours), each followed by a long dark period Compare long-day
Word History and Origins
Origin of short-day1
Example Sentences
In the South, where onions are typically sown in the fall and transplanted to harvest in late spring, short-day varieties are the choice; in the Northeast, where bulb formation happens in the summer from spring transplants, long-day varieties are indicated.
Short-day onions start forming a bulb when day length reaches 12 to 13 hours.
Gardeners south of 36 degrees North latitude should be growing short-day onions, and those in between should grow intermediate-day types.
The strawberries he selected for the company’s first vertical farms in New Jersey are known as “short-day cultivars.”
Most growers plant June-bearing strawberries, which are strongly affected by day-length and only initiate flower buds under short-day conditions, resulting in a brief period of fruit production.
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