Poinsettias - Silver Sage FFA

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Transcript Poinsettias - Silver Sage FFA

Poinsettias
http://youtu.be/ug0PnXI1Ehc
History
• Native to Mexico
• Joel Pointsett, the first U.S. Ambassador to Mexico, introduced poinsettias to the United
States in 1828. He liked them so much that he took them back to his greenhouses in
South Carolina and began giving them to his friends.
• New production techniques and hybridizing have improved poinsettias so they now
hold their color longer, have larger bracts, are more compact, and they come in a
variety of colors.
• Poinsettias are the highest selling potted flowering crop in the U.S.
Myths
• Rumored to be highly toxic, the poinsettia’s toxicity is
exaggerated. According to poison control centers, a 50-pound
child would have to eat over 500 poinsettia leaves to reach a toxic
dose.
• While eating parts of poinsettias shouldn’t kill a person or an
animal, it might cause nausea and induce vomiting.
• However, the flavor is so bad it stops most children or animals
from chewing on the leaves.
Stages
•Vegetative
•Flower Bud Initiation
•Flower Bud Development
•Flowering
Vegetative Stage
• Late August
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Pot in a finishing pot, drench with fungicides.
Promote vegetative growth by lighting plants from 10:00pm to 2:00 am
Fertilize with 300 ppm nitrogen and potassium.
Provide 68-70 degrees F night and 70-80 degrees F day temperatures
• September 5-15
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Pinch the plant leaving 4-6 leaves
Maintain high humidity
Raise fertilizer to 350-400 ppm nitrogen and potassium
Maintain temperatures
Flower Bud Initiation
Stage
•September 20-25
• Turn lights off and give plants short days 5:00 pm- 8:00 am
• Drop temperatures to 62-64 F at night and 70-72 F during the
day
• Fertilize at 300-350 ppm nitrogen and potassium
• Space plants 15 inches by 15 inches to avoid stretching
Flower Bud
Development Stage
•October 10
• Flower buds begin to develop
• Stop shading
• Temperatures are adjusted to 64-66 F at night and 70-75 F
during the day
• Fertilize at a rate of 300 ppm nitrogen and potassium
• Drench with a fungicide to control root rot
Flowering Stage
•November 15
• Finish plants by dropping temperatures to 58-62 F at night
to deepen bract color
• Reduce fertilizer to 200-300 ppm nitrogen and potassium
Common Problems
• The most serious insect pest on poinsettias is the whitefly
• Other problems include: Poinsettia hornworm, fungus gnats, spider mites,
beet armyworm, scale, various fungal diseases, Botrytis, root and stem rot,
bacterial canker
• A clean, weed free greenhouse and a pest control program reduce insect
problems
• Well timed fungicide applications and careful watering practices reduce
losses caused by fungi
Poinsettia Flowering
• The true flower of the poinsettia is the small, yellowish
structures that form in the growing tip known as cyathia
• Bracts, the colored leaves for which the plant is known, are
modified leaves surrounding flowers that develop
pigmentation in response to flower initiation
Pinching
• Pinching which is the removal of the growing tip, or terminal to encourage
development of lateral (side) shoots
• Pinching can be done using a knife or by using fingers to “snap” the tip from
the plants
• A soft pinch will include removal of the tip and small, immature leaves only
• Today’s poinsettias respond best to soft pinches that stimulate side shoot
growth from young stem tissue