Abstract

Common buckwheat is a valuable crop, mainly due to the beneficial chemical composition of its seeds. However, buckwheat cultivation is limited because of unstable seed yield. The most important reasons for the low yield include embryo and flower abortion. The aim of this work is to verify whether high temperature affects embryological development in this plant species. The experiment was conducted on plants of a Polish cultivar ‘Panda’ and strain PA15, in which the percentage of degenerating embryo sacs was previously determined and amounted to 32% and 10%, respectively. The plants were cultivated in phytotronic conditions at 20 °C (control), and 30 °C (thermal stress). The embryological processes and hormonal profiles in flowers at various developmental stages (buds, open flowers, and wilted flowers) and in donor leaves were analyzed in two-month-old plants. Significant effects of thermal stress on the defective development of female gametophytes and hormone content in flowers and leaves were observed. Ovules were much more sensitive to high temperature than pollen grains in both genotypes. Pollen viability remained unaffected at 30 °C in both genotypes. The effect of temperature on female gametophyte development was visible in cv. Panda but not in PA15 buds. A drastic reduction in the number of properly developed embryo sacs was clear in open flowers at 30 °C in both genotypes. A considerable increase in abscisic acid in open flowers ready for fertilization may serve as a signal inducing flower senescence observed in the next few days. Based on embryological analyses and hormone profiles in flowers, we conclude that cv. ‘Panda’ is more sensitive to thermal stress than strain PA15, mainly due to a much earlier response to thermal stress involving impairment of embryological processes already in the flower buds.

Highlights

  • Common buckwheat (Fagopyrum esculentum Moench) belongs to the Polygonaceae family, but it is classified as a “pseudocereal” crop due to the cereal-like chemical composition of its seeds

  • The aim of this work is to investigate the hormonal profile during flower development associated with the embryological development of common buckwheat exposed to thermal stress (30 ◦C)

  • We found no significant influence of thermal stress on pollen viability in either genotype compared with that of the control

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Summary

Introduction

Common buckwheat (Fagopyrum esculentum Moench) belongs to the Polygonaceae family, but it is classified as a “pseudocereal” crop due to the cereal-like chemical composition of its seeds. Buckwheat is sensitive to ground frost, high temperatures, and drought, which may cause extensive flower and embryo abortion. It forms dimorphic plants with flowers harboring pistils and stamens of different lengths (pin and thrum types) and shows self-incompatibility [4,5]. The most important reasons for the low yield include self-incompatibility, insufficient fertilization, embryo abortion, sensitivity to heat, and drought stress, as well as deficiency of assimilates in aging plants [6,9,10]. Heat-related elimination of stigma receptivity, inhibition of pollen germination, and pollen tube growth are well known symptoms of temperature stress [13,14,15]

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