Multiple Choice
Citrus fruit has always been distributed from areas where the fruit is grown to other parts of the country, often by train. In the early 1900s train cars were heated with coal, and it was believed that this heat helped ripen the fruit. Imagine the surprise of growers and suppliers when fruit that arrived in new boxcars heated by steam arrived unripe. Why did the fruit no longer ripen?
A) The length of time needed to ripen the fruit was met by slow-moving older trains; newer steam-powered locomotives arrived before the fruit ripened.
B) Ethylene, a by-product of coal burning, ripened the fruit in the cars with the coal stove but was absent from the steam-powered trains.
C) The light from the coal-burning stoves caused the fruits to experience short nights, so without this light, they no longer ripened.
D) The steam prevented the buildup of abscisic acid, which is needed to ripen fruit.
Correct Answer:

Verified
Correct Answer:
Verified
Q20: Ethylene triggers the ripening of fruit for
Q21: Which class of hormones produced in the
Q22: Iris is a long-day plant that normally
Q23: Which type of plant hormone generally acts
Q24: What stimulates germination of desert plant seeds
Q26: How does phytochrome control flowering?<br>A) by disrupting
Q27: <img src="https://d2lvgg3v3hfg70.cloudfront.net/TB6039/.jpg" alt=" -In addition to
Q28: What is one way that plants use
Q29: Under what conditions would you expect a
Q30: Bush beans grow as small bushes rather