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Seed development and dormancy
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Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Dec 14, 2015

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Payton Anker
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Page 1: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Seed development and dormancy

Page 2: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Seed

• A fertilized ovule• Protective outer covering (seed coat)• Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm)• Embryo (radicle and shoot)

• Carries all the genetic information, that when properly translated, results in plants with characteristics similar to the parents

Page 3: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.
Page 4: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.
Page 5: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Seed Coat

• Seed coat—surrounding the seed– Tough layer for

protection– Prevents water

loss

Page 6: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Pistil

Page 7: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Sticky Stigma

Page 8: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.
Page 9: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Embryo• Seed production begins in the ovary with the union of the

pollen sperm nucleus and egg in the ovule• The embryo is a new plant resulting from the male and

female gamete during fertilization• The embryo contains one or two cotyledons or seed

leaves, a radicle or immature root, and an immature shoot

• Epicotyl is above the cotyledons, hypocotyl is below the cotyledons

• The endosperm is a nutritive source for the seed and developing plant

Page 10: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Seed Provenance

• The geographic source of the seed• From hot to cold climates – may flower too

early, may break dormancy too early (injury), and not harden off in fall (injury)

• From cold to hot climates – may harden early (no fall color), may break bud and flower late

Page 11: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Provenance example

• Acer rubrum has a natural range from Minnesota to Florida, but if you take an Acer rubrum from Florida and plant it in Minnesota, it will not harden off early enough and can sustain cold damage.

Page 12: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Seed collection

• Ripe?– Experience– No more increase in

fresh weight– Make a calendar

• From a known source• Healthy (disease free)• Minimize hybridization?

– Isolation!

Page 13: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Viability

• Is the seed “good”?• Sound seeds sink, non-

viable float (sometimes)• Germination test• Tetrazolium test– Living tissue – turns red– Dead tissue – no color

change• X-ray

Page 14: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Seed storage

• How long will the seed remain viable?

• Varies with species and storage conditions

• Viability can be prolonged by cool temperatures, low humidity, low oxygen

• Keep environment constant

• Under 41 °F (general)

Page 15: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

A long time• The oldest carbon-dated seed

that germinated was a Judean Date Palm from Herod the Great’s palace in Israel, dating from 2,000 years ago

• Most recently a 31,800 (± 300) year old Silene stenophylla found in a squirrel’s nest in permafrost in northeastern Siberia was regenerated

• http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2012/02/17/1118386109

Page 16: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Seed dormancy

• If the seed is viable and it has favorable environmental conditions, but there is a lack of germination, we call the seed dormant

• If the seed simply needs to imbibe water to initiate germination, we call the seed quiescent

Page 17: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

3 types of seed dormancy

• Exogenous (outside the embryo)– Physical – water and/or oxygen can not be imbibed– Mechanical – embryo can not expand through– Chemical – germination inhibitors in the surrounding

tissue (fruit)• Endogenous (inside the embryo)– Physiological – size and development of the embryo

• Double – a seed experiencing both of the above

Page 18: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Overcoming exogenous physical seed dormancy

• Must scarify seed coat before the seed will germinate

1. Mechanical1. Nick with a file2. Sandpaper or gravel in drum

2. Chemical1. Sulfuric acid

3. Temperature1. Hot water to soften2. High temperatures to mimic fire

4. Sow in summer (biological)5. Warm stratification

(temperature and biological)

Page 19: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

• All of these techniques mimic nature

• Freeze thaw cycles• Fire, hot desert areas• Decomposition by

bacteria and fungi• Digestion by animals

Overcoming exogenous physical seed dormancy (cont.)

Page 20: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Overcoming exogenous mechanical seed dormancy

• Must break or weaken the shell and/or seed coat

1. Mechanical2. Temperature

1. Hot water to soften2. High temperatures to mimic fire

3. Sow in summer (biological)4. Warm stratification (temperature and biological)

Page 21: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Overcoming exogenous chemical seed dormancy

• Remove the tissue/fruit covering the seed• Leach seeds repeatedly in water• Example: some desert plants only germinate

after hard rains– ensures enough water to germinate and grow– chemical inhibitors in seed coat are washed away

Page 22: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Overcoming endogenous seed dormancy

• Embryo requires a period of after-ripening induced by cool, moist conditions

• Placing harvested seeds in cool, moist conditions is called cold stratification

• Length of time depends on species• Stratification environment must provide

oxygen, moisture, and cool temps (41 °F)• 4 to 1 stratification media to seeds (moist

sphagnum in a plastic bag works well)

Page 23: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Overcoming double dormancy

• Must remove all obstacles in the proper order – exogenous first, then endogenous

• Ex. Scarification, to allow imbibition of water, followed by cold stratification, to allow embryo maturation

Page 24: Seed development and dormancy. Seed A fertilized ovule Protective outer covering (seed coat) Storage tissue (cotyledons, endosperm) Embryo (radicle and.

Think about

• How deep should a seed be planted?