Abstract

We explored the hypothesis that, in flood-prone habitats, nitrates can signal to seeds that a drawdown period has begun. To investigate this issue, Setaria parviflora (Poir.) Kerguélen seeds were buried in a never-flooded upland and a nearby, flood-prone lowland grassland. Seeds were exhumed during the flooding period. Additionally, grassland mesocosms with buried S. parviflora seeds were flooded during 20 d (controls drained). After both field and mesocosm pretreatments germination was assayed in laboratory at 25 °C in a medium with or without nitrates, under red light pulses or in darkness. Seeds exhumed from the never-flooded upland showed no specific requirements to germinate. In contrast, seeds exhumed from the flooded lowland germinated ca. 65% when nitrates were combined with red light pulses, significantly higher than in the rest of the treatments. Seeds exhumed from drained mesocosms germinated equally in all treatments. However, in the seeds exhumed from the flooded mesocosms, nitrates increased germination by more than 20% compared with seeds imbibed in water. Seeds germinated ca. 85% when nitrates were combined with red light pulses, significantly higher than in the other treatments. We can conclude that after flooding, S. parviflora seeds require nitrate and light to germinate. Therefore, a large fraction of seeds do not germinate unless nitrates are combined with light, indicating a drawdown period after floods and vegetation gaps.

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