SEED DORMANCY AND GERMINATION IN MELAMPYRUM LINEARE |
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Authors: | E J C Curtis J E Cantlon |
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Institution: | Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, Michigan State University, East Lansing |
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Abstract: | Immature seeds of Melampyrum lineare Desr. have very high germination percentages and dormancy is induced in a variable fraction of the seed crop during ripening. Correlated with this is the endogenous gibberellin-like activity which is found in considerable amounts in immature seeds, less in batches of ripe seeds, and is not detectable in batches containing only dormant seeds. For germination dormant seeds require activation followed by cold storage. In the laboratory activation is produced by allowing moist, dormant seeds to respire freely for several weeks at 20 C, or by treatment with exogenous GA3. Dormancy appears to be most directly related to inability of the embryo to hydrolyze the thickened, mannan-containing endosperm cell walls. Embryos excised from dormant seed can be grown on agar enriched with whole macerated dormant seeds or with the ethanol-extractable materials from these (mostly sucrose and a glycoside). However, dormant seed material does not support growth when extracted to remove benzene- and ethanol-soluble materials. |
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