The effects of moisture content on the low temperature responses of Araucaria hunsteinii seed and embryos
Abstract
The effect of moisture content on the low temperature responses of 'recalcitrant' Araucaria hunsteinii seed and excised embryos was investigated in relation to germination and storage. At 6°C seed longevity was decreased as mean moisture content was reduced from 45 to 30% (fresh weight basis); the time predicted for the loss of one probit of germination, σ, fell from about 2000 to 20 d. The estimated base temperature for germination rate, Tb, was near 6°C. Germination occurred during storage at 6°C unless the initial seed moisture content was below about 45%. Embryo freezing point decreased from -6 to -19°C as moisture content was decreased from 44 to 27%. The unfrozen water content of the embryo was estimated by thermocouple and differential scanning calorimetry methods to be around 25%. Embryos exhibited reduced growth in vitro following drying below the moisture content range 34-41%, equivalent to water potentials below about -4 MPa. Moisture was unevenly distributed among component tissues of the embryo; in undried material, the radicle had a higher moisture content than the hypocotyl and the hypocotyl was in turn moister than the cotyledons. Individual embryo tissues completely lost the ability for organized growth when dried below 25% moisture content, although some cells survived, as shown by callus production from the radicle. This type of survival on drying was also seen in embryos after their subsequent cryopreservation in liquid nitrogen and after 4 years storage at -20°C within 'non-germinable' seeds. Practical storage conditions for seeds and embryos are considered in relation to these findings.
Citation
Pritchard, H.W.; Tompsett, P.B.; Manger, K.; Smidt, W.J. The effects of moisture content on the low temperature responses of Araucaria hunsteinii seed and embryos. Annals of Botany (1995) 76 (1) 79-88. [DOI: 10.1006/anbo.1995.1081]