Author:
PEKRUN C.,HEWITT J. D. J.,LUTMAN P. J. W.
Abstract
Laboratory studies on the biology of oilseed rape
(Brassica napus L.) showed that the induction of
secondary dormancy is influenced by light environment, time
of exposure to light and darkness,
temperature regime and genotype. Seeds did not become dormant
while exposed to light but were
increasingly likely to become dormant the longer they were
exposed to water stress and darkness.
Dormancy was broken by alternating warm and cold temperatures.Conclusions from results obtained in Petri dishes have been
tested in the field and hypotheses
regarding the effects of post-harvest cultivation have been
proposed. In July 1995, field experiments
were initiated on a flinty silty clay loam and a sand to test
the implications of post-harvest cultivation
on the development of a persistent seedbank. The results
largely confirmed assumptions made on the
basis of laboratory findings. Seeds that had been exposed to
water stress and darkness for longest,
by cultivating the soil at the beginning of the experiment,
immediately after seed distribution,
exhibited the highest persistence rates. Seeds that were
exposed to light for 4 weeks and then
incorporated into the soil built up a much smaller seedbank.
The seedbank was very small or
nonexistent in plots that had not been cultivated at all.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
75 articles.
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