Abstract
AbstractMost species of Fabaceae produce seeds with physical dormancy which was broken by some environmental factors in the field, yet for the mechanism of physical dormancy release in the natural condition is still poorly understood. In present study, seeds of Sophora alopecuroides from two populations were placed on the soil surface or buried at depths of 2 and 7 cm in the field and were exhumed at time intervals to assess the changes of dormancy. Also, microenvironments were simulated in the laboratory to determine the possible components (temperature, temperature fluctuation, and moisture) involved in physical dormancy release. The laboratory work indicated that wet heat is an important dormancy release mechanism for both populations; and dry heat for one of them, but showed no effects on the other one. Consistent with that, burial experiment showed seeds of two populations had two contrasting‐dormancy release patterns in the field. Most seeds of the dry heat sensitive population released dormancy but the other one remained dormant when seeds placed on the soil surface for 11 months (where seeds were exposed to dry heat but not wet heat). The difference of physical dormancy release pattern response to burial depth and simulated condition may attribute to seed coat color and hilum thickness which showed significantly different between two populations. This conclusion may improve understanding of physical dormancy release mechanism among populations and have a practical use for grassland management and weed control.
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