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Secondary dormancy induction and release in Bromus tectorum seeds: the role of temperature, water potential and hydrothermal time

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 January 2017

K. K. Hawkins
Affiliation:
Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT 84602, USA
P.S. Allen*
Affiliation:
Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT 84602, USA
S.E. Meyer
Affiliation:
US Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station, Shrub Sciences Laboratory, Provo, UT 84606, USA
*
*Correspondence Email: Phil_Allen@byu.edu
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Abstract

Seeds of the winter annual Bromus tectorum lose primary dormancy in summer and are poised to germinate rapidly in the autumn. If rainfall is inadequate, seeds remain ungerminated and may enter secondary dormancy under winter conditions. We quantified conditions under which seeds enter secondary dormancy in the laboratory and field and also examined whether contrasting B. tectorum genotypes responded differently to dormancy induction cues. The study also extends previous hydrothermal time models for primary dormancy loss and germination timing in B. tectorum by using similar models to account for induction and loss of secondary dormancy. Maximum secondary dormancy was achieved in the laboratory after 4 weeks at –1.0 MPa and 5°C. Seeds in the field became increasingly dormant through exposure to temperatures and water potentials in this range, confirming laboratory results. They were released from dormancy through secondary after-ripening the following summer. Different genotypes showed contrasting responses to dormancy induction cues in both laboratory and field. To examine secondary dormancy induction and release in the field in terms of hydrothermal time parameters, we first created a model that allowed mean base water potential (Ψb(50)) to vary while holding other hydrothermal time parameters constant, as in models for primary dormancy loss under dry conditions. The second model allowed all three model parameters to vary through time, to account for changes (e.g. hydrothermal time accumulation) that could occur simultaneously with dormancy induction in imbibed seeds. Shifts in Ψb(50) could explain most changes in dormancy status for seeds retrieved from the field, except during the short period prior to dormancy induction, when hydrothermal time was accumulating. This study illustrates that hydrothermal modelling, and specifically changes in Ψb(50), can be used to characterize secondary dormancy induction and loss in B. tectorum.

Information

Type
Research Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017 
Figure 0

Table 1. Changes in hydrothermal time parameters for two Bromus tectorum seed collections when all model parameters were allowed to vary during secondary dormancy induction and release in the field (modelling approach 2)

Figure 1

Figure 1. Results of a secondary dormancy induction experiment with fully after-ripened Bromus tectorum seeds (Spanish Fork Farm, UT) incubated at 20°C in water for 28 days (A) or at 5°C for either 7 (B), 14 (C) or 28 days (D) at several water potentials (0, –0.5, –1.0, –1.5 and –2.0 MPa). Seeds at all negative water potentials were transferred to water and incubated for an additional 28 days at 20°C (transfer represented by the vertical dashed line on each graph). Final germination means separations for the chilling duration by water potential interaction are from generalized mixed model analysis of variance for a binomial variable (PROC GLIMMIX, SAS 9.4). Final germination values followed by the same letter do not differ significantly at the P < 0.05 level.

Figure 2

Figure 2. Results of a secondary dormancy induction experiment with fully after-ripened greenhouse-grown seeds of four Bromus tectorum genotypes showing final germination after seeds were incubated at 0, 2 and 5°C for 28 days at water potentials from 0 to –2.0 MPa, then transferred to water at 20°C for an additional 28 days. Error bars represent standard error of the mean. See text for statistics.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Results of a field retrieval experiment with greenhouse-grown seeds of ten Bromus tectorum genotypes from contrasting habitats showing changes in post-retrieval seed germination fraction after 28 days in water at two incubation temperatures following 0–8 months on the litter surface at the Whiterocks UT study site. Error bars represent standard error of the mean. See text for statistics.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Seed bed microclimate conditions during and after the period of secondary dormancy induction in Field experiment 2 at the Whiterocks Study site in 2012–2013. The dashed horizontal line represents 5°C; the continuous line represents 0°C. Arrow indicates date of retrieval installation. Hourly seedbed temperature data were recorded in situ, while daily precipitation data for the Whiterocks study site were downloaded from the PRISM climate interpolator: http://www.prism.oregonstate.edu/explorer/

Figure 5

Figure 5. Predicted (lines) and observed (symbols) time course curves for germination of Spanish Fork (SFF) and Whiterocks (WRK) Bromus tectorum seeds in post-retrieval incubation in water (Ψ = 0) after 1–8 months in the field. Curves were obtained by fitting each of the two hydrothermal time models to the observed laboratory data. Dashed lines represent Modelling approach 1, which allowed only mean base water potential [Ψb(50)] to change (Fig. 4). Continuous lines represent Modelling approach 2, which allowed all hydrothermal parameters [θHT, Ψb(50), σΨb] to vary across retrievals (Table 1). From January to June insufficient germination occurred to estimate Model 1 hydrothermal parameters [θHT, Ψb(50), σΨb], and from February to June germination percentages were too low (0–5% in water) even for estimation of Ψb(50) from the initial hydrothermal time equation.

Figure 6

Figure 6. Mean base water potentials calculated from post-retrieval germination time course curves in water at two incubation temperatures, using initial hydrothermal time equations (Table 1) for two Bromus tectorum collections following retrieval from the field over a 9-month period. The dashed line represents the lowest mean base water potential at which any germination in water would be predicted, based on the initial standard deviation of base water potentials for each collection [i.e. the threshold value of Ψb(50) is twice σΨb; see Table 1]. Months with missing values had mean base water potentials above this threshold; i.e. seeds were essentially completely dormant in water.