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Habitat-specific seed dormancy-release mechanisms in four legume species

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 June 2013

Rieks D. van Klinken*
Affiliation:
CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences, EcoSciences Precinct, PO Box 2583, Brisbane, Qld4001, Australia
Jean-Baptiste Goulier
Affiliation:
CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences, EcoSciences Precinct, PO Box 2583, Brisbane, Qld4001, Australia AgroParisTech Paris Institute of Technology for Life, Food and Environmental Sciences, 16 rue Claude Bernard, F-75231Paris Cedex 05, France
*
*Correspondence E-mail: rieks.vanklinken@csiro.au
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Abstract

Physical seed dormancy is a common attribute among plants, and a wide range of dormancy-release mechanisms have been described, but their ecological significance is rarely tested through comparative study. This study tests whether dormancy-release responses to wet heat in four legume species with physical dormancy are correlated with habitat: two wetland species (Mimosa pigra and Parkinsonia aculeata, both dispersed primarily by water) and two terrestrial species (Acacia nilotica and Prosopis pallida, both dispersed primarily through vertebrate herbivores). Dormancy release was compared at three moisture levels (80% relative humidity, saturated and submerged) at constant (20–45°C) and diurnally fluctuating (20/40°C) temperatures for 14 d. Seed viability was tested by germinating at 25°C. The functional relationship between temperature and dormancy release after 14 d differed between species: submerged seeds of the two wetland species showed a quadratic response, with low rates of imbibition below 20–25°C and complete imbibition at around 40°C; P. pallida seeds showed a linear positive relationship, whereas there was no temperature response for A. nilotica seeds below 45°C. Surprisingly, dormancy release after 14 d was relatively insensitive to moisture levels, although rate of dormancy release was generally slower under drier conditions. Dormancy release was not influenced by fluctuating temperatures. Seed viability was largely unaffected by temperature or moisture regime, although it did differ with species and was lower for non-dormant seeds. Our results suggest that a functional dormancy-release response to wet heat provides important fitness benefits for wetland species, but not for species dispersed through vertebrate herbivores, for which it may be maladaptive.

Information

Type
Research paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - SA
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/3.0/. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained for commercial re-use.
Copyright
Copyright © CSIRO 2013
Figure 0

Figure 1 The effect of 14 d of exposure to constant temperature and moisture (saturated and submerged) conditions on dormancy release for two wetland (a and b) and two terrestrial (c and d) species. The relationship between temperature for seeds exposed to saturated or submerged treatments is shown when significant. Moisture treatments are pooled (‘all seeds’) when there was no moisture effect. Different letters indicate significant difference (P< 0.05) between temperatures for the combined moisture treatments, except for M. pigra (b) for which there was a significant temperature–moisture interaction (see text).

Figure 1

Figure 2 Dormancy release through time for the two wetland (a and b) and two terrestrial (c and d) species for saturated (dashed lines) and submerged seeds (solid lines) illustrated for three temperatures (20, 30 and 45°C, represented by increasingly thick lines). ANOVAs calculated individually for each day were significant for temperature (dashed lines) and humidity (solid lines) on the days indicated on the x axis.

Figure 2

Table 1 The effect of temperature and humidity on mean (SE) percentage of seeds released from dormancy (imbibed) after 14 d. Different letters indicate significant differences (P<0.05) within a species

Figure 3

Table 2 Mean (SE) viability of seeds (per cent) that were non-dormant or dormant after 14 d. There was no moisture effect, but temperature was significant for dormant seeds (see text). Different letters indicate significant differences (P<0.05) among dormant and non-dormant seeds, respectively