Abstract

Pseudobombax tomentosum and P. longiflorum are common trees in the Cerrado region, but the former species is more common in forest edges while the later is present in open cerrado areas. This work aimed to investigate differences in seed germination and seedling growth in these species, from seed collected from Cerrado areas in Central Brazil. For this, a seed germination experiment was designed and included four replicates with 25 seeds per species; seeds were randomly distributed in the germination chamber. To evaluate initial seedling growth, seedlings height was measured up to 67 days after seedling emergence; besides, some of these seedlings were grown for biomass evaluation during nine months. Results showed that seeds of the two species had the same germinability (near 100%) and mean germination time (ca. 12 days). However, P. longiflorum showed a more spread seed germination through time, with higher values of coefficient of variation in germination time and uncertainty index; and lower values of synchronization than P. tomentosum. The two species showed basically the same growth pattern, but lower values for height of apical meristem, diameter of underground structures (mostly roots), dry mass of shoots, underground structure and total mass of seedlings in P. tomentosum were obtained, compared to P. longiflorum. Both species allocated more dry mass to underground structures in detriment of shoot. This probably allows resprouting behavior which prevents hydric stress and detrimental fire action typical of the open Cerrado areas.

Highlights

  • Seed germination patterns differ in the same family, genus and even for the same species (Baskin & Baskin 1998)

  • The distribution of the relative frequency of germination differs between species (D=0.1980, p

  • P2 0.5577 0.2585 0.0026 0.5373 0.6200 0.0001 0.2425 0.0490 0.0061 0.0050 0.1030 0.0707. Both species of Pseudobombax presented high germinability and similar growth patterns, but there were some differences in germination time and synchrony, which may be associated to their preferential habitat

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Seed germination patterns differ in the same family, genus and even for the same species (Baskin & Baskin 1998). Other studies for the family focused on the ratio between dry mass of roots and shoots or on seedling growing under different light and soil conditions, without records for Pseudobombax (Moreira & Klink 2000, Scalon et al 2003). The objective of this paper was to test, on the one hand, if seed germination of P. longiflorum would be more asynchronous and seedling mass allocated predominantly in the underground structures, favoring seedling survival in the open savanna areas. For P. tomentosum, typical of forest formation with less water stress, with an expected more synchronized germination process and seedlings would have more mass allocated to the stems, favoring light absorption and continuous growth

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call