Abstract

For plants inhabiting unpredictable environments, scheduling germination can be challenging. Various responses to environmental conditions have been evolved by plants; these responses combine with variation in local climate to construct germination niche. Germination process may be regulated by a number of factors, among them, the type of seed dormancy and dormancy cycling play an important role in promoting survival after dispersal. In the present study, seeds of Brassica napus were tested for primary conditional dormancy (CD). Dormancy changes were quantified through seed population thermal germination parameters to test whether different genotypes of B. napus seeds (944, 966, Alestrom, Danube, Okanto and Rohan) are non‐dormant (ND) at the maturity or if they present primary dormancy (D or CD). In a burial experiment, B. napus seeds dormancy cycling in the natural soil seedbank was investigated. Germination of all genotypes decreased at 5 and > 20°C, showing narrower breadth of thermal niche for germination. Dormancy‐breaking treatments lead to the widening of thermal range permissive for germination. The lower limit (Tl(50)) and higher limit (Th(50)) temperatures for germination decreased and increased, respectively, for non‐dormant (after‐ripened seeds treated with GA3) seeds compared with fresh seeds in all genotypes. In fresh seeds, the Tl(50) and Th(50) for various genotypes ranged from 3.61 to 6.5°C and 25.0 to 29.0°C, respectively and ranged from 0.2 to 1.8°C and 35 to 41.0°C in non‐dormant seeds. Thus, fresh seeds of B. napus are dormant at dispersal and adopt delayed germination strategies to avoid summer drought. In the burial experiment, the results indicated that B. napus must have D/ND cycle in which fresh seeds first become dormant and then the cycle begins (CD→D↔CD↔ND), thus adopting both risk‐prone and risk‐adverse strategies to spread the likelihood of survival over time.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call