Using automated sanding to homogeneously break seed dormancy in black locust (Robinia pseudoacacia L., Fabaceae)
MONTY, Arnaud
Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech [Faculté universitaire des sciences agronomiques de Gembloux] [[FUSAGx]]
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Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech [Faculté universitaire des sciences agronomiques de Gembloux] [[FUSAGx]]
Language
en
Article de revue
This item was published in
Seed Science Research. 2017, vol. online first, p. 1-8
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
English Abstract
Physical dormancy of Robinia pseudoacacia seeds makes it a challenge for scientists and forest managers to obtain a homogeneous germination for larger seed samples. Water imbibition of the seeds can be achieved through ...Read more >
Physical dormancy of Robinia pseudoacacia seeds makes it a challenge for scientists and forest managers to obtain a homogeneous germination for larger seed samples. Water imbibition of the seeds can be achieved through manual piercing of the seed coat, but this method remains time consuming and heterogeneous. We tested several ecologically friendly methods to break seed dormancy, including manual pin puncture, water soaking, oven dry-heating (two temperatures) and sanding. Sanding was performed using an automatic grinder to control shaking duration (three durations) and get a homogeneous scraping of the coat. All methods, except dry-heating, resulted in successful dormancy breaking; water soaking was the least efficient method, attaining 57% germination. Sanding proved to be as efficient as puncturing (97%) but long duration sanding (10 or 15 min) could damage cotyledons, which would impede further development of the plant. Short-time sanding (5 min) proved to be the best method to reach high total germination and healthy (undamaged cotyledon) seedlings, and was successfully applied to 500 seeds. The reference puncture method and the automatic sanding were also tested on seeds of nine Fabaceae species and proved to be efficient for some species. Automated sanding can thus be used as a standard to break physical dormancy of black locust or other Fabaceae seeds to allow further comparative studies of plant populations or genotypes.Read less <
Keywords
fabaceae
scarification
robinia pseudoacacia
dormance
English Keywords
automated grinder
dormancy breaking
germination
sanding
standard protocol
locust trees
dormancy
ANR Project
COntinental To coastal Ecosystems: evolution, adaptability and governance - ANR-10-LABX-0045
Origin
Hal imported