Abstract
The speed of the deterioration of oil-seeds depends on conditions of the storage environment and understanding dormancy release time is important to increase the amount and uniformity in germination. Therefore, the present study was conducted to evaluate the effect of different packaging materials and storage environments on viability and dormancy of sesame. The black sesame seed was stored in three packaging materials (woven polypropylene bag, IRRI super bag, metal bin) under two environment conditions (ambient and cold storage) for eight-month (initial storage, 2-month, 4-month, 6-month and 8-month). The effect of storage environments, packaging materials and storage durations on germination percentage, germination index, seedling vigor index I and II were significant. The moisture content decreased in the early parts of storage periods and then increased in later. The moisture content of seeds in the packaging materials increased in long storage due to the effect of seed respiration and heat accumulation in a package. Higher viability was observed in ambient storage, and in a woven polypropylene bag. Because the dormancy release was slow in low- temperature condition and the carbon dioxide concentration in the airtight package inhibited the dormancy break. It also increased during storage and the earliest fully dormancy break has occurred in six-month of woven polypropylene bag storage under ambient condition. Therefore, the germination and dormancy release of sesame were influenced by storage environments packaging materials and storage durations.
Highlights
Seed deterioration starts immediately after a crop has attained the physiological maturity stage
In current experiment, the moisture content was not significantly different among packaging materials, except numerically higher in woven polypropylene bag, it may be due to the relative humidity of natural condition in laboratory which was not high enough to influence the effect of type of packages
The black sesame was tested in a woven polypropylene bag, IRRI super bag and a metal bin under ambient and dry cold conditions for eight-month
Summary
Seed deterioration starts immediately after a crop has attained the physiological maturity stage. Sesame deterioration is even faster immediately after harvest from the field due to its high oil content and fast cellular respiration occurring in the seed (Oyekale et al, 2012). The speed of the deterioration of oil-seeds depends on conditions of the storage environment and on particularities of the species, which include the seed chemical composition. Their oil content readily oxidizes, which deteriorate the seed health in storage. The type of packaging during storage supposes relevant importance on seed and the packaging helps on lessening the speed of deterioration by maintaining the initial moisture content of seeds stored, and by diminishing, or not, their respiration rate (Brooker et al, 1992)
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