Abstract

AbstractDormancy-breaking requirements and types of dormancy were determined for seeds ofLonicera fragrantissimaLindl. & Paxt.,L. japonicaThunb.,L. maackii(Rupr.) Maxim. andL. morrowiiA. Gray. Seeds of all four species have underdeveloped spatulate embryos that are about 20–40%fully developed (elongated) when dispersed. Embryos in freshly matured, intact seeds grew better at 25/15°C than at 5°C. Gibberellic acid (GA3) (tested only in the light) was more effective in breaking dormancy inL. maackiiandL. morrowiithan inL. fragrantissimaandL. japonica. Warm- followed by cold stratification was required to break dormancy in seeds ofL. fragrantissima, whereas seeds ofL. japonicarequired cold stratification only. Thus, seeds ofL. fragrantissimahave deep simple morphophysiological dormancy (MPD) and those ofL. japonicanondeep simple MPD. About 50%of the seeds ofL. maackiirequired warm- or cold stratification only to come out of dormancy and 50% of those ofL. morrowiirequired warm stratification only, whereas the other 50% did not require stratification to germinate. Thus, about half of the seeds of the two species has nondeep simple MPD, and the other half has morphological dormancy (MD). In these laboratory tests, seeds ofL. japonica,L. maackii, andL. morrowiigenerally germinated to significantly higher percentages in light than in darkness; seeds ofL. fragrantissimawere not tested in darkness. Peaks of germination for seeds ofL. fragrantissima,L. japonica,L. maackiiandL. morrowiisown on a soil surface and covered withQuercusleaves under near-natural temperature conditions shortly after seed maturity and dispersal in late June 1997, late November 1997, early November 1996 and late June 1998, respectively, occurred in early March 1998, late February 1998, late March 1997 and early October 1998, respectively. The germination phenologies of seeds of the same species and seed lots buried in soil were similar to those of seeds under leaf litter. High percentages of seeds of all four species germinated both under litter (78–96%) and beneath the soil surface (78–97%). These germination patterns correspond closely with the requirements for embryo growth and dormancy break in the fourLoniceraspecies.

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