Abstract

Black cumin is an annual oilseed crop, native to the Mediterranean region and widely used for nutritional and medicinal purposes. Reduced seed germination and early seedling growth under saline conditions are considered as major factors limiting the establishment of crops. The objective of this study was to investigate the effect of salinity due to NaCl on germination of black cumin seeds. A set of experiments was conducted under completely randomized design with four replications of 200 seeds at two different suboptimal germination temperatures (15 and 20 °C) in the dark for 16 days. In order to create salt stress conditions during the germination process, five solutions were used (0 as control, 80, 160, 240 and 320 mM NaCl). The germination performance was evaluated by final germination percentage and mean germination time. The effect of salinity on seed germination percentage and mean germination time was significant at p<0.01. Germination of the controls was 96% and 95% at 15 °C and 20 °C, respectively. The presence of NaCl, regardless of temperature, reduced germination. This reduction was more severe at 15 °C (15%, and 19% germination in cases of 80 and 160 mM concentration respectively) than at 20 °C (65% at 80 mM salinity level) and no germination was observed from 240 mM onwards. The mean germination time increased with increased NaCl levels, especially at the lower temperature of 15 °C. The overall results of this experiment showed the inhibitory effects of salt stress on seed germination parameters of black cumin.

Highlights

  • Black cumin (Nigella sativa L.) is an annual oilseed crop, belonging to the Ranunculaceae family, native to the Mediterranean region

  • The effect of salinity on seed germination percentage and mean germination time was significant at p

  • The overall results of this experiment showed the inhibitory effects of salt stress on seed germination parameters of black cumin

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Black cumin (Nigella sativa L.) is an annual oilseed crop, belonging to the Ranunculaceae family, native to the Mediterranean region. Black cumin is a generally short-lived annual, typical of disturbed soils or natural communities of semiarid areas, with a dominance of therophytes (Tuncturk et al, 2012). It is widely used for nutritional and medicinal purposes in many countries because of its high oil, antioxidant and protein contents (Ramadan, 2007). The seeds or their extracts contain antiabetic, antihistaminic, anti-hypertensive, antiinflammatory, antimicrobial, antitumor, galactagogue and insect repellent effects. Black cumin seed has identified as a valuable source of edible oil with 24.829.2% saturated and 69.7-73.5% unsaturated fatty acids (Piras et al, 2013)

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