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Effect of desiccation and storage on the seeds of two related species in the Amaryllidaceae from the western Cape Province

This paper reports results on the first detailed physiological study undertaken on potentially recalcitrant seeds from the western Cape. Germination and dehydration behaviour of two related monocots Boophane flava Barker ex Snijman and Amaryllis belladonna L. (Amaryllidaceae) were studied to determi...

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Main Author: Caplan, Marc
Other Authors: Farrant, Jill M
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Caplan, Marc
author2 Farrant, Jill M
author_browse Caplan, Marc
Farrant, Jill M
author_facet Farrant, Jill M
Caplan, Marc
author_sort Caplan, Marc
collection Thesis
description This paper reports results on the first detailed physiological study undertaken on potentially recalcitrant seeds from the western Cape. Germination and dehydration behaviour of two related monocots Boophane flava Barker ex Snijman and Amaryllis belladonna L. (Amaryllidaceae) were studied to determine whether these seeds are indeed recalcitrant, and if so their degree of tolerance, and to gain an understanding of the reproductive strategies of these species through their seeds behaviour. Seeds were stored under mildly desiccating conditions, moisture content was determined at regular intervals and the ultrastructure of the hypocotyl apex tissue was examined. Both species are shed at high moisture content in a metabolically active state, and are able to tolerate considerable loss of this water (420-120% for B.flava) before water contents became lethal. Nevertheless, seeds were killed at high water contents a characteristic typical of recalcitrant seeds. A.belladonna seeds showed increased levels of subcellular organization during storage despite low viability scores. B.flava seeds showed hypocotyl extension and in a few instances roots and shoots were produced in storage, they began to lose viability after 8 weeks in storage at a moisture content below 120%. B.flava is a moderately recalcitrant seed species, with a slow germination rate. Although hypocotyl extension occurs in store, the onset of cell division and axis differentiation is delayed and occurred only . occasionally in store. This is interpreted as being ·a strategy to halt subcellular events which increase susceptibility to water loss. Seed maturity of B.flava is suggested to be polymorphic in response to an unreliable seasonal rainfall pattern.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:24.523Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
publishDateSort 2017
publisher Department of Biological Sciences
publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/24403 Effect of desiccation and storage on the seeds of two related species in the Amaryllidaceae from the western Cape Province Caplan, Marc Farrant, Jill M Botany This paper reports results on the first detailed physiological study undertaken on potentially recalcitrant seeds from the western Cape. Germination and dehydration behaviour of two related monocots Boophane flava Barker ex Snijman and Amaryllis belladonna L. (Amaryllidaceae) were studied to determine whether these seeds are indeed recalcitrant, and if so their degree of tolerance, and to gain an understanding of the reproductive strategies of these species through their seeds behaviour. Seeds were stored under mildly desiccating conditions, moisture content was determined at regular intervals and the ultrastructure of the hypocotyl apex tissue was examined. Both species are shed at high moisture content in a metabolically active state, and are able to tolerate considerable loss of this water (420-120% for B.flava) before water contents became lethal. Nevertheless, seeds were killed at high water contents a characteristic typical of recalcitrant seeds. A.belladonna seeds showed increased levels of subcellular organization during storage despite low viability scores. B.flava seeds showed hypocotyl extension and in a few instances roots and shoots were produced in storage, they began to lose viability after 8 weeks in storage at a moisture content below 120%. B.flava is a moderately recalcitrant seed species, with a slow germination rate. Although hypocotyl extension occurs in store, the onset of cell division and axis differentiation is delayed and occurred only . occasionally in store. This is interpreted as being ·a strategy to halt subcellular events which increase susceptibility to water loss. Seed maturity of B.flava is suggested to be polymorphic in response to an unreliable seasonal rainfall pattern. 2017-05-24T07:08:59Z 2017-05-24T07:08:59Z 1993 Bachelor Thesis Honours BSc (Hons.) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/24403 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Botany
Caplan, Marc
Effect of desiccation and storage on the seeds of two related species in the Amaryllidaceae from the western Cape Province
thesis_degree_str Bachelor's / Honours
title Effect of desiccation and storage on the seeds of two related species in the Amaryllidaceae from the western Cape Province
title_full Effect of desiccation and storage on the seeds of two related species in the Amaryllidaceae from the western Cape Province
title_fullStr Effect of desiccation and storage on the seeds of two related species in the Amaryllidaceae from the western Cape Province
title_full_unstemmed Effect of desiccation and storage on the seeds of two related species in the Amaryllidaceae from the western Cape Province
title_short Effect of desiccation and storage on the seeds of two related species in the Amaryllidaceae from the western Cape Province
title_sort effect of desiccation and storage on the seeds of two related species in the amaryllidaceae from the western cape province
topic Botany
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/24403
work_keys_str_mv AT caplanmarc effectofdesiccationandstorageontheseedsoftworelatedspeciesintheamaryllidaceaefromthewesterncapeprovince