Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-vvkck Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T02:14:20.030Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Responses of tomato seeds to osmoconditioning as related to temperature and oxygen

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 September 2008

N. Ozbingol
Affiliation:
Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Laboratoire de Physiologie Végétale Appliquée, Tour 53, 1er etage, 4 place Jussieu, 75252 Paris cédex 05, France
F. Corbineau*
Affiliation:
Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Laboratoire de Physiologie Végétale Appliquée, Tour 53, 1er etage, 4 place Jussieu, 75252 Paris cédex 05, France
D. Côme
Affiliation:
Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Laboratoire de Physiologie Végétale Appliquée, Tour 53, 1er etage, 4 place Jussieu, 75252 Paris cédex 05, France
*
*Corespondence

Abstract

Untreated (control) tomato seeds germinated at temperatures ranging from 15 to 35°C. There was a positive linear relationship between the rate of germination (expressed as the reciprocal of time to obtain 50% germination) and temperature up to the thermal optimum. At higher temperatures, the negative relationship was also linear. The thermal optimum for seed germination was 27–28°C and the lower and maximal temperatures were around 9 and 40°C, respectively. Germination was strongly reduced in atmospheres containing less than 10% oxygen. After pretreatment at 15°C in a polyethylene glycol-8000 solution at –1.0 MPa, seeds germinated faster in a wider range of temperatures, and this stimulatory effect remained after drying back the seeds. Such a pretreatment did not change the optimal and maximal temperatures of germination, but decreased the lower temperature to about 6°C. The beneficial effect of osmoconditioning increased as the duration of the treatment increased and was maximal after 5–7 days. Osmotic pretreatment also reduced the sensitivity of seeds to oxygen deprivation; 50% of the seeds germinated within 7 days in 5% oxygen. The range of temperatures and the concentrations of oxygen which were effective in osmoconditioning were very similar to those which allowed the germination of untreated seeds. In particular, the optimal temperature (27–28°C) and oxygen concentrations (more than 10%) for osmoconditioning and germination were the same. These results confirm that the beneficial effect of osmotic pretreatment (priming) corresponds to the realization of germination sensu stricto (phase II of the germination process).

Type
Physiology & Biochemistry
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1998

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Argerich, C.A. and Bradford, K.J. (1989) The effects of priming and ageing on seed vigour in tomato. Journal of Experimental Botany 40, 599607.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bino, R.J., De Vries, J.N., Kraak, H.L. and Van Pijlen, J.G. (1992) Flow cytometric determination of nuclear DNA replication stages in tomato seeds during priming and germination. Annals of Botany 69, 231236.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bierhuizen, J.F. and Wagenvoort, W.A. (1974) Some aspects of seed germination in vegetables. 1. The determination and application of heat sums and minimum temperature for germination. Scientia Horticulturae 2, 213219.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradford, K.J. (1986) Manipulation of seed water relations via osmotic priming to improve germination under stress conditions. HortScience 21, 11051112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradford, K.J. and Haigh, A.M. (1994) Relationship between accumulated hydrothermal time during seed priming and subsequent seed germination rates. Seed Science Research 4, 6369.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bray, C.M. (1995) Biochemical processes during the osmopriming of seeds. pp 767789in Kigel, J., Galili, G. (Eds) Seed development and germination. New York, Basel, Hong Kong, Marcel Dekker.Google Scholar
Bray, C.M., Davison, P.A., Ashraf, M. and Taylor, R.M. (1989) Biochemical changes during priming of leek seeds. Annals of Botany 63, 185193.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brocklehurst, P.A. and Dearman, J. (1983) Interactions between seed priming treatments and nine seed lots of carrot, celery and onion. I. Laboratory germination. Annals of Applied Biology 102, 577584.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brocklehurst, P.A., Dearman, J. and Drew, R.L.K. (1984) Effects of osmotic priming on seed germination and seedling growth in leek. Scientia Horticulturae 24, 201210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bujalski, W. and Nienow, A.W. (1991) The large scale priming of onion seeds: a comparison of different strategies for oxygenation. Scientia Horticulturae 46, 1324.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bujalski, W., Nienow, A.W. and Gray, D. (1989) Establishing the large scale osmotic priming of onion seeds by using enriched air. Annals of Applied Biology 115, 171176.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bujalski, W., Nienow, A.W., Maude, R.B. and Gray, D. (1993) Priming responses of leek (Allium porrum L.) seeds to different dissolved oxygen levels in the osmoticum. Annals of Applied Biology 122, 569577.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bujalski, W., Nienow, A.W. and Petch, G.M. (1991) The bulk priming of leek seeds — the influence of oxygen enriched air. Process Biochemistry 26, 281286.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chojnowski, M., Corbineau, F. and Côme, D. (1997) Physiological and biochemical changes induced in sunflower seeds by osmopriming and subsequent drying, storage and aging. Seed Science Research 7, 323331.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, N.A. and James, P.E. (1991) The effects of priming and accelerated ageing upon the nucleic acid content of leek seeds and their embryos. Journal of Experimental Botany 42, 261268.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Côme, D. (1980/1981) Problems of embryonal dormancy as exemplified by apple embryo. Israel Journal of Botany 29, 145156.Google Scholar
Côme, D. (1982) Germination. pp 129225in Mazliak, P. (Ed.) Croissance et développement. Physiologie végétale II, Paris, Hermann.Google Scholar
Côme, D. and Thévenot, C. (1982) Environmental control of embryo dormancy and germination. pp 271298in Khan, A.A. (Ed.) The physiology and biochemistry of seed development, dormancy and germination, Amsterdam, New York, Oxford, Elsevier Biomedical Press.Google Scholar
Côme, D. and Tissaoui, T. (1968) Induction d'une dormance embryonnaire secondaire chez le pommier (Pirus malus L.) par des atmosphères très appauvries en oxygène Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, Paris 266, Série D, 477479.Google Scholar
Corbineau, F. and Côme, D. (1990) Effects of priming on the germination of Valerianella olitoria seeds in relation with temperature and oxygen. Acta Horticulturae 267, 191197.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corbineau, F. and Côme, D. (1995) Control of seed germination and dormancy by the gaseous environment. pp 399423in Kigel, J., Galili, G. (Eds) Seed development and germination. New York, Basel, Hong Kong, Marcel Dekker.Google Scholar
Corbineau, F., Picard, M.A. and Côme, D. (1994) Germinability of leek seeds and its improvement by osmopriming. Acta Horticulturae 371, 4552.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Covell, S., Ellis, R.H., Roberts, E.H. and Summerfield, R.J. (1986) The influence of temperature on seed germination rate in grain legumes. 1. A comparison of chickpea, lentil, soybean and cowpea at constant temperatures. Journal of Experimental Botany 37, 705715.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dahal, P., Bradford, K.J. and Jones, R.A. (1990) Effects of priming and endosperm integrity on seed germination rates of tomato genotypes. Journal of Experimental Botany 41, 14311439.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dahal, P., Kim, N.-S. and Bradford, K.J. (1996) Respiration and germination rates of tomato seeds at suboptimal temperatures and reduced water potentials. Journal of Experimental Botany 47, 941947.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davison, P.A. and Bray, C.M. (1991) Protein synthesis during osmopriming of leek (Allium porrum L.) seeds. Seed Science Research 1, 2935.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dell'Aquila, A. and Bewley, J.D. (1989) Protein synthesis in the axes of polyethylene glycol treated pea seeds and during subsequent germination. Journal of Experimental Botany 40, 10011007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dell'Aquila, A. and Spada, P. (1992) Regulation of protein synthesis in germinating wheat embryos under polyethylene glycol and salt stress. Seed Science Research 2, 7580.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ellis, R.H. and Butcher, P.D. (1988) The effect of priming and natural differences in quality amongst onion seed lots on the response of rate of germination to temperature and the identification of characteristics under genotype control. Journal of Experimental Botany 39, 935950.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gray, D., Steckel, J.R.A. and Hands, L.J. (1990) Responses of vegetable seeds to controlled hydration. Annals of Botany 66, 227235.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guedes, A.C. and Cantliffe, D.J. (1980) Germination of lettuce seeds at high temperature after seed priming. Journal of American Society for Horticultural Science 105, 777781.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haigh, A.M. and Barlow, E.W.R. (1987) Germination and priming of tomato, carrot, onion and sorghum seeds in a range of osmotica. Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science 112, 202208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heydecker, W., Higgins, J. and Turner, Y.J. (1975) Invigoration of seeds? Seed Science and Technology 3, 881888.Google Scholar
Karssen, C.M., Haigh, A., van der Toorn, P. and Weges, R. (1989) Physiological mechanisms involved in seed priming. pp 269280in Taylorson, R.B. (Ed) Recent advances in the development and germination of seeds. New York, London, Plenum Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mauromicale, G. and Cavallaro, V. (1997) A comparative study of the effects of different compounds on priming of tomato seed germination under suboptimal temperatures. Seed Science and Technology 25, 399408.Google Scholar
Michel, B.E. and Kaufmann, M.R. (1973) The osmotic potential of polyethylene glycol 6000. Plant Physiology 51, 914916.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Smok, M.A., Chojnowski, M., Corbineau, F. and Côme, D. (1993) Effects of osmotic treatment on sunflower seed germination in relation with temperature and oxygen. pp 10331038in Côme, D., Corbineau, F. (Eds) Fourth international workshop on seeds. Basic and applied aspects of seed biology, Vol. 3, Paris, ASFIS.Google Scholar
Thompson, P.A. (1974) Characterisation of the germination responses to temperature of vegetable seeds. I. Tomatoes. Scientia Horticulturae 2, 3554.CrossRefGoogle Scholar