Abstract

To establish the best conditions for germination, calorimetric experiments were conducted with individual soybean seeds ( Glycine max [L.] Merr.) under different conditions of imbibition at 24.7 °C. The calorimetric curves were analysed for imbibition and metabolic processes and compared with imbibition curves to establish a general methodology that could be used to evaluate inter- and intra-species physical and physiological variability. Measurements of pH were performed during the determination of the imbibition curves . The best experimental method for calorimetric investigations of seed germination is to insert the seed in 1% agar instead of placing the seed over wetted filter paper disks. Correlation of imbibition experiments and pH results with mass specific enthalpy of imbibition (determined in a KCN solution) or mass specific enthalpy of germination when seeds were germinated in 1% agar allowed determination of the water content needed for soybean seeds of the cultivar studied (A7636 RG) to activate their metabolic machinery (74–80% or 2.5–3 h) and the moment in which they are ready for root protrusion (122% or 9 h). The method presented here should be useful for evaluating soybean coat permeability to water and other factors related to seed damage before and during harvest and storage.

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