Author:
Bolger T. P.,Chapman R.,Le Coultre I. F.
Abstract
Pastures in the Mediterranean region of Australia are typically comprised of a
mixture of winter annuals, including grasses and legumes, which utilise a seed
bank to survive the long, dry summer. The risk of out-of-season summer rain
requires species from such environments to adopt appropriate strategies to
protect their seed banks. The seed bank strategies of the grasses from these
environments have, so far, received little attention. We conducted an
experiment to observe the dormancy release characteristics of 3 grasses common
to these environments when stored under contrasting thermal regimes. The
grasses studied were great brome grass (Bromus diandrus
Roth), annual ryegrass (Lolium rigidum Gaud.), and
barley grass (Hordeum leporinum Link).
The different species displayed contrasting dormancy release characteristics
over the summer. Two of the species examined (great brome grass and annual
ryegrass) displayed relatively late release from dormancy which gave high
levels of protection from false breaks. The other (barley grass) displayed
earlier release from dormancy which would enable it to better exploit earlier
true breaks but make it more sensitive to false breaks. Unlike pasture
legumes, high and fluctuating temperatures were not necessary for the seeds of
these grasses to become germinable. In fact, exposure to high temperatures
appeared more likely to suppress release from dormancy.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
19 articles.
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