Germination and emergence of Sorghum bicolor. genotypic and environmentally induced variation in the response to temperature and depth of sowing |
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Authors: | D. HARRIS Q. A. HAMDI A. C. TERRY |
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Affiliation: | ODA Microclimatology Group, University of Nottingham School of Agriculture, Sutton Bonington, Loughborough LE12 5RD, U.K. |
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Abstract: | Abstract The germination of Sorghum bicolor seeds of 9 genotypes was tested at temperatures between 8°C and 48°C on a thermal gradient plate. Samples were tested from three regions of the panicle expected to differ in temperature during grain filling. Seeds of a tenth genotype, SPV 354, produced in controlled-environment glasshouses at different panicle temperatures, were tested similarly. In addition, the emergence of SPV 354 was measured from planting depths of 2 and 5 cm at mean soil temperatures of 15, 20 and 25°C. Four methods of calculating mean germination rate for the nine genotypes were compared. Germination characters like base, optimum and maximum temperature (Tb, To, Tm), thermal time (θ)and the germination rate at To(Rmax showed only small differences between methods. There was a range of genotypic variation in all characters: Tb 8.5–11.9°C; To, 33.2–37.5°C; Tm, 46.8–49.2°C; θ, 23.4–38.0°Cd; Rmax, 0.69–1.14-d-1. In contrast, mean germinability (G) was between 90% and 100% over the temperature range 13–40°C. Panicle temperature had no effect on any germination character in SPV 354. However, deeper burial increased θ for emergence and decreased G, irrespective of soil temperature except at 5 cm. Increasing panicle temperature, by reducing seed size, reduced G and increased θ by about 10% only at 15°C and 5 cm depth. |
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Keywords: | Sorghum bicolor Gramineae germination emergence temperature sowing depth seed size |
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