Study on the Relationship between Flowering Characteristics and Fruit Setting of Oil Tree Peony
Xiangnan He1, Xinyu Gao1, Kaiyue Zhang2, Dongfeng Wei3, Yuying Li1, Chunling He2, Xiaogai Hou1,*
1 College of Agriculture/Tree Peony, Henan University of Science & Technology, Luoyang, China
2 College of Horticulture and Plant Protection, Henan University of Science & Technology, Luoyang, China
3 College of Urban Construction, Luoyang Vocational & Technical College, Luoyang, China
* Corresponding Author: Xiaogai Hou. Email:
(This article belongs to the Special Issue: Integrated Approaches to Crop Yield Enhancement)
Phyton-International Journal of Experimental Botany https://doi.org/10.32604/phyton.2026.078506
Received 01 January 2026; Accepted 02 March 2026; Published online 13 March 2026
Abstract
This study investigated the association between floral and fruiting traits in oil tree peony to inform elite breeding and hybrid programmes. Floral and fruiting metrics of
Paeonia ostii ‘Fengdanbai’ and
Paeonia rockii ‘Zibanbai’ were recorded under natural conditions; data were analysed using independent-samples
t-tests, Pearson correlations, stepwise multiple linear regression and membership functions.
Paeonia ostii ‘Fengdanbai’ produced more pollen number per flower, but fewer ovules and seeds per fruit than
Paeonia rockii ‘Zibanbai’ (
p < 0.05). Pollen viability and stigma receptivity followed similar unimodal temporal curves in both taxa. Peak pollen viability occurred on day 3 after anthesis in
P. ostii ‘Fengdanbai’ (86.95 ± 1.41%) and on day 2 in
P. rockii ‘Zibanbai’ (85.91 ± 2.99%). Optimal stigma receptivity spanned days 3–5 and 2–5 post-anthesis, respectively, yielding a 3-day overlap favourable for synchronous pollination. Seed number per fruit correlated positively with petal number per flower (r = 0.49), ovule number per fruit (r = 0.68) and seed setting rate (r = 0.70,
p < 0.01); carpel number also contributed (r = 0.31,
p < 0.05). Stepwise multiple regression identified ovule number per fruit and seed setting rate as the most significant predictors of seed number per fruit (
p < 0.001), together explaining over 99% of the variation in the model (adjusted R
2 = 0.992). Membership function analysis, based on pollen viability, ovule number per fruit, and seed setting rate, suggested that ‘Fengdanbai’ exhibits superior comprehensive performance, though selection indices should be validated across broader germplasm. We propose ovule number per fruit and seed setting rate as primary selection indices, with pollen viability as a supplementary indicator, for consideration in breeding high-yield cultivars.
Keywords
Oil tree peony; flower traits; pollen viability; stigma receptivity; fruiting characteristics