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From knowledge-based research towards accurate and rapid testing of seed quality in winter rape

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2012

Marie-Hélène Wagner*
Affiliation:
GEVES, Station Nationale d'Essais de Semences, rue G. Morel, 49071 Beaucouzé, France
Sylvie Ducournau
Affiliation:
GEVES, Station Nationale d'Essais de Semences, rue G. Morel, 49071 Beaucouzé, France
Aurélia Luciani
Affiliation:
GEVES, rue G. Morel BP 90024, 49071 Beaucouzé, France
Joël Léchappé
Affiliation:
GEVES, Station Nationale d'Essais de Semences, rue G. Morel, 49071 Beaucouzé, France
*
*Correspondence Email: Marie-Helene.wagner@geves.fr
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Abstract

Winter rape has a life cycle which necessitates rapid testing of seed quality for the seed production sector, namely between July after harvest of the previous crop and August when the next crop establishment begins. As this crop is the fourth most important crop in France, and the most important oilseed crop, the French seed testing station GEVES has managed several research programmes to study seed quality in this species. These collaborative programmes have not only associated seed science with seed technology but also informatics and electronic engineering to provide seed testing tools that are already used by the seed sector, such as conductivity, or innovative tools, such as germination time courses monitored by computer imaging. Forthcoming tools have also been looked at in order to control seed storage potential, which is often used nowadays to anticipate the next season. Biochemical markers have been studied, including seed-specific biotinylated proteins or enzymes involved in free radical (reactive oxygen species) scavenging, such as catalase. Both are well correlated with seed ageing and have been tested to provide an ELISA-like assay for seed testing laboratories. Germination monitoring by computer imaging is now used by research and breeding institutes to phenotype varying seed material, including genotype or mutant collections, primed or ageing seed lots, etc. The next step in seed quality testing in oilseed rape is to characterize variation in germination and seed vigour in order to stabilize optimal yield. This aim constitutes a new international project involving high-throughput phenotyping and genotyping of a large collection of genetically diverse rapeseed genotypes (double haploid populations or diverse cultivars).

Information

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012. The online version of this article is published within an Open Access environment subject to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike licence <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/>. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained for commercial re-use.
Figure 0

Figure 1 Seed moisture content (a), mean seed dry weight (b), ABA content (c), ability to germinate after seed drying (d) and total germination (e) for two cultivars: apical dominant (diamonds) and bushy type (circles). Seeds were collected weekly during their development in the field in 1998. Means of germination and ABA content are represented ±  SD. (A colour version of this figure can be found online at http://journals.cambridge.org/ssr).

Figure 1

Figure 2 Correlation between standard germination test of oilseed rape (ISTA, 2011) and conductivity test. Data of 520 samples analysed from 2002 to 2010 at the French seed testing station. (A colour version of this figure can be found online at http://journals.cambridge.org/ssr).

Figure 2

Table 1 Main characteristics obtained at 20°C for 42 samples of oilseed rape. Seed lots with the same letter are from the same cultivar. Values are means of 50 seeds ± standard error of the means (SEM); the general mean is of the 42 lots ± standard deviation (SD)