Exceptional desiccation resistance in recalcitrant seeds of Brosimum alicastrum may confer ecological advantage
Louise Colville, Timothy R. Marks, Anaité López-Alquijay, Wolfgang Stuppy, Jayanthi Nadarajan, Hugh W. Pritchard, Alexandre Monro

TL;DR
Brosimum alicastrum seeds can resist drying despite being sensitive to it, helping the tree thrive in diverse environments across Latin America.
Contribution
The study reveals the multifaceted mechanisms behind the seeds' exceptional desiccation resistance in Brosimum alicastrum.
Findings
Brosimum alicastrum seeds are highly desiccation sensitive but show exceptional resistance to drying.
The seed cuticle's structural, biochemical, and biophysical properties control water loss.
Puncturing the cuticle eliminates desiccation resistance, causing rapid seed death.
Abstract
The recalcitrant seeds of Brosimum alicastrum, a widespread tropical tree, have an exceptional ability to resist desiccation, which we propose has contributed to the dominance of the species across a broad precipitation gradient in forests of Latin America. Seed desiccation sensitivity is relatively common in tree species of tropical rain forests. For such species, pre-germination survival may be as important as seedling establishment in determining reproductive success, yet the adaptive traits important for survival are poorly understood. We studied seeds of Brosimum alicastrum Sw., a dominant tree species across a very broad precipitation gradient in Central America. This ecological success seems counterintuitive to the putative presence of seed desiccation sensitivity, that potentially severely limits propagule survival. We evaluated the anatomical, chemical and physiological traits…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSeed Germination and Physiology · Plant Water Relations and Carbon Dynamics · Plant Stress Responses and Tolerance
