Weedy Adaptation in Setaria spp.: VII. Seed Germination Heteroblasty in Setaria faberi
Milton J. Haar, Jack Dekker

TL;DR
This study investigates seed dormancy and germination heteroblasty in Setaria faberi, revealing that seed maturity timing and environmental conditions influence dormancy levels and germination potential.
Contribution
It uncovers the relationship between seed development stages, environmental factors, and dormancy variation in S. faberi, highlighting inherent seed heteroblasty.
Findings
Seed from earlier tillers are more dormant.
Later-maturing seeds have higher germination rates.
Dormancy variation is consistent across environments.
Abstract
The dormancy status of S. faberi seed at abscission was assessed with reference to tiller and panicle development. Seed from a single genetic line were grown under field, greenhouse and controlled environment growth chamber conditions. At abscission, a small fraction (<10%) of S. faberi seed germinated under favorable conditions. Seed were dissected and germination of caryopses and embryos also tested. Removal of seed structures exterior to the embryo increased percentage germination. As the seed rain progressed mean percentage germination and variation among samples increased. Changes in germination were correlated with tiller development and relative time of seed maturity within a panicle. Seed produced on tillers that developed earlier were more likely to be dormant than seed from later-developing tillers. Seed that matured later on a panicle were more likely to germinate than seed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant and animal studies · Allelopathy and phytotoxic interactions · Seed Germination and Physiology
