INVESTIGADORES
MOLLARD Federico Pedro Otto
artículos
Título:
Dormancy breakage and germination are tightly controlled by hypoxic submergence water on Echinochloa crus-galli seeds from an accession resistant to anaerobic germination
Autor/es:
ECHEVERRY HOLGUIN; CREPY MARIA ; STRIKER GG; MOLLARD, F. P. O.
Revista:
SEED SCIENCE RESEARCH
Editorial:
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Referencias:
Lugar: Cambridge; Año: 2020
ISSN:
0960-2585
Resumen:
In wetlands, dormancy may be a key functional trait enabling seeds to avoid underwater germination,which could be lethal for seedling establishment. Our objectives were to find out (i)if shallow dormant (i.e. conditionally dormant) Echinochloa crus-galli seeds from an anaerobicgermination resistant accession can break dormancy under hypoxic submergence and(ii) if underwater germination can be restored in scarified, non-dormant seeds. Shallow dormantE. crus-galli seeds perceived diurnally alternating temperatures (AT) and red light (R)pulses (i.e. dormancy-breaking cues) under hypoxic submergence; however, an inhibitoryfar-red light pulse given at the end of the 4-d inundation period demonstrated that most ofthe seeds (85%) were unable to break dormancy. Scarified E. crus-galli seeds, which did notexpress dormancy under drained conditions, were unable to germinate under hypoxic submergence,despite being exposed to dormancy-breaking cues (AT + R). Lastly, the temporalwindow for germination sensitivity to the inhibitory action of hypoxia, once dormancy-breakingsignals have been applied, is progressively lost and bounded to approximately 18 h for halfof the seed lot. These results highlight the importance of dormancy as a trait enabling E. crusgalliseeds to avoid underwater germination, a risky scenario for seedling emergence andestablishment in this facultative hydrophyte.