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Seed Germination Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502‑509, 631‑632, 637‑638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

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Page 1: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Seed GerminationText Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502‑509,

631‑632, 637‑638

Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Page 2: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Microbodies Imbition Dry seed germination Germination: external factors Phytochrome After-ripening Special requirements Roles of hormones

Objectives

Page 3: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Single membrane-bound organelles0.5 – 1.5 mm diameter+/- crystalline body of protein

Microbodies

Page 4: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Two types•Peroxisomes•Glyoxysomes

Microbodies

Page 5: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Peroxisomes

Photorespiration (glycolic acid metabolism)

Common in green leaves

Text, Fig. 3-16, p. 45

Page 6: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Site of b-oxidation and the glyoxylate cycle

Stored lipids converted to carbs during seed/spore germination

Glyoxysomes

Page 7: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Question for thought: What is imbition and why does it occur?

Page 8: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Adsorption of water by a dry material resulting in its swelling (or onto internal surface)

Dry material (cellulose) has a very low (negative) water potential.

Imbibition

Page 9: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Cellulose: ionic/polar (net - charge)Water: polar (partial + and - charge)

◦Thus, water adheres to cellulose, causing swelling.

Why does imbition occur?

Why?

Page 10: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Question for thought: Is germination of dry seeds possible if the seed does not imbibe water?

Why or why not?

Page 11: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Mature seeds are dry◦ only 5-20% water

Imbibition is necessary◦for metabolic activity, i.e., to activate enzyme activity

No, germination cannot occur in most seeds. Why?

Page 12: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

WaterOxygenTemperatureLight requirement◦phytochrome (red/far red response)

External Factors Aiding Seed Germination

Page 13: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Activates metabolism (imbibition)◦Activates enzymes present◦Synthesis of other enzymes

Enzymes needed◦Digest and use stored nutrients◦Respiration for ATP production◦DNA/RNA/protein synthesis

Water

Page 14: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Early stages of germination are entirely anaerobic

Becomes aerobic when seed coat ruptures

Why does respiration switch from anaerobic to aerobic when O2 becomes available?

Oxygen

Page 15: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

If soil is waterlogged◦Maybe insufficient oxygen available for aerobic respiration

◦Seed will either:fail to germinate, orfail to grow into a seedling

Oxygen con’t

Page 16: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Wide range of germination◦ Min temp: 0-5oC◦ Max temp: 45-48oC◦ Opt range: 25-30oC

Temperature

Page 17: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Phytochrome response Some need exposure to red light at 660 nm to

germinate Require light

◦ Small seeds of weeds, lettuce, grasses, etc.◦ Very little nutrient storage

Require absence of light◦ poppies and geraniums

Light Requirement

Page 18: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Phytochrome

Page 19: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Phytochrome (Pr) [Blue

Pigment]

Text, Fig. 28-19, p. 633

Page 20: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Phytochrome

Text, Fig. 28-18, p. 633

Page 21: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

1 Red -- Far Red . . .2 Far Red -- Red . . .3 R -- FR -- R . . . .4 FR -- R -- FR -- R -- FR .5 FR -- FR -- FR -- FR -- R.

NoYesYesNoYes

Lettuce Seed Germination

Page 22: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Data interpretation:

Why do small weed seeds not germinate on the floor of a dense temperate forest, but do germinate if several trees are removed?

Page 23: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

These plants require Pr to germinate. Red light (660 nanometers) does not reach the bottom of the forest, inhibiting the conversion of Pfr into Pr.

Answer

Page 24: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Question for thought: even when external conditions

are favorable, some seeds will fail to germinate.

Why?

Page 25: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

The embryo is physiologically immature

Seed coat impermeable to H2O and O2

Two Most Common Reasons

Page 26: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Must undergo a process called after-ripening before they will germinate.

Physiologically ImmatureSeeds (Embryo)

Page 27: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Function (Adaptive Significance):◦Ensures seed will germinate under

favorable conditions: Not during winter Controlled hormones

Abscisic Acid -- inhibits Gibberellins -- stimulates

After-Ripening

Page 28: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

In our area◦Triggered by low temperature of winter

As temperatures increase in spring◦ABA breaks down◦GA is produced initiating after-ripening

After-Ripening con’t

Page 29: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Special Requirements for Germination in

Some Seeds

Page 30: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

◦ Tambalacoque or Dodo tree (Sideroxylon grandiflorum, and the Dodo bird)

◦ Mulberry and coralberry

◦ Promotes wider dispersal of species

1) Digestion

Page 31: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Turkeys Take Over

Today Sideroxylon grandiflorum seeds are encouraged to germinate by being fed to turkeys or by turning them in a gemstone polisher.

Page 32: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Symphoricarpos orbiculatus -- Coralberry

Page 33: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Scarification Many seeds are sealed within a tightly sealed

endocarp or the seed coat is extremely hard and covered with a thick waxy coat

Such seed germinate only after the seed coat is scratched or cracked

2) Mechanical Cracking of Seed Coat

Page 34: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Tumbling along in the rushing water of a gravelly stream

Bacterial or fungal action Freeze-thaw cycles Abrasive handling by squirrels or other animals Passing through digestive system of some animals

How does the seed coat becomes scratched?

Page 35: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Especially of desert species Ensures the seed will germinate

only during those rare intervals when desert rainfall provides sufficient water

Ex: Artemisia spp., Aloe sp.

3) Excessive Rain to Leach Growth Inhibitors out of the Seed Coat

Page 36: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Aloe ferox

http://www.csdl.tamu.edu/FLORA/schoepke/alo_fe_1.jpg

Page 37: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

4) Fire (Intense Heat)

Plants of the California chaparral community

Manzanita (Arctostaphylos viscida)

Many pines◦Jack pine

Text Fig. 22-9, p. 505

Page 38: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Manzanita (Arctostaphylos viscida)

Page 39: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Pinus banksiana -- Jack Pine Serotinous cones (cones remaining

closed until the occurrence of high temperatures such as created by a fire)

http://web2.uqat.uquebec.ca/ferld/recherches/Jackpine.htm

Page 40: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Jack Pine con’t

Maturing seed cones at the end of their second season of development (September)

http://www.unbf.ca/forestry/species/pinusbnk.htm

Page 41: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Jack Pine con’t

Seed cones open on a burnt branch after passage of a fire - a normal way in which seed-shedding becomes possible and the species regenerates

http://www.unbf.ca/forestry/species/pinusbnk.htm

Page 42: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Selective Advantage:Favors survival of the seedling

because competitors have been killed by the fire

Fire (Intense Heat) con’t

Page 43: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Moisture content of most seeds drops to 5-20%

Selective Advantage?

5) Seeds Must Dry Before They Will Germinate

Prevents the seeds from germinating while they are inside the moist fruit of the parent plant

Page 44: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Examples:Fleshy fruits such as apples, pears,

etc.

Seeds Must Dry con’t

Page 45: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Low temperature stimulates after-ripening

Also necessary for the breakdown of ABA present in the seed

6) Exposure to Cold

Page 46: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Horticultural practice that mimics exposure to cold

Expose seeds to 5oC for 100 daysUsed by horticulturists to germinate

seeds of many ornamental plants and fruit trees

Stratification

Page 47: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Seeds and Seed Germination Eastern Connecticut State University http://koning.ecsu.ctstateu.edu/plants_human/seedg

erm.html

Seed Germination Web Site

Page 48: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

-Dormancy is extremely valuable, because it allows for plants to survive by going dormant (non active) over periods of coldness.

Dormancy

Page 49: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Gibberellic acid (GA)Abscisic acid (ABA)

Plant Hormones in Germination

Page 50: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Role of ABA ABA = Abscisic Acid (plant hormone)

Text Fig. 27-12, p. 613

Page 51: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Initiates dormancy and prevents germination

Does this (presumably) by preventing synthesis of hydrolytic enzymes

ABA is antagonistic to GA

Role of ABA con’t

Page 52: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Role of GA GA = Gibberellic Acid (plant hormone)

Text Fig. 27-14, p. 614

Page 53: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

To overcome seed dormancyImbibition stimulates the embryo to

release GAGA causes:

◦Cellular elongation of embryo◦Synthesis of hydrolytic enzymes (such as

amylase, etc.)

Role of GA con’t

Page 54: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Role of GA con’t

Barley Seed (Hordeum vulgare)

Text Fig. 27-16, p. 615

Page 55: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Compare and contrast the floral characteristics of wind-pollinated and animal-pollinated flowers.

Speculate why it is that animal pollination is more common in the desert.

Thought Questions

Page 56: Text Pages: 76 (Box), 466 (coconut), 502 ‑ 509, 631 ‑ 632, 637 ‑ 638 Ben Lockwood and Charlie Hartman

Eichhorn, Evert, Raven. Biology of Plants. Seventh ed. 2005. W.H. Freeman and

Co. Publishers.

Citations