Author:
ICHIE TOMOAKI,NINOMIYA IKUO,OGINO KAZUHIKO
Abstract
We studied the resource allocation process of a large-seeded species, Dryobalanops lanceolata, during
germination and early stages of seedling growth in Sarawak, East Malaysia. The seeds contained high contents of
starch (74.3% of the total 1.57 g mean dry weight of the cotyledon) and lipid (15.0%). All of these reserves were
exhausted by the time the first two pairs of leaves had developed (about 40 d after planting), but relatively little had
been reserved in leaf or root by that time. This suggests that the large amount of seed reserve of D. lanceolata is
necessary just to form a certain size of stem and the necessary number of leaves to set the plant up for photosynthesis.
After seed reserves were exhausted, shoot elongation and new leaf production stopped, and most photosynthate was
allocated to the expansion of the root system and to storage in the root as starch. The storage reserves in the root are
thought to be used for the next growing stage, not to act as insurance for sprouting in case of shoot damage.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
24 articles.
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