Michael R. Verhoeven, Jonah A. Bacon, Daniel J. Larkin
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For <em>Potamogeton illinoensis</em> and <em>P. natans</em>, scarification plus gibberellic acid increased germination the most, to 83% and 35%, respectively (corrected for viability). The other two species remained wholly (<em>Brasenia schreberi</em>) or overwhelmingly (<em>Nuphar variegata</em>) ungerminated. For the two species that did germinate, germination probability increased with seed mass (<em>P. natans</em> and <em>P. illinoensis</em>) and elongation (<em>P. natans</em>). While the small size of trait effects relative to seed treatment effects suggests the latter are more important for revegetation work, the trait patterns highlight evolutionary tradeoffs in seed-size investments. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
人们对完全水生(沉水植物和浮水植物)植物物种的发芽生物学和打破休眠的要求研究相对较少。这严重阻碍了淡水系统植被恢复工作的开展,因为淡水系统种子丰富,而且可以大量播种,这表明积极重新植被的潜力尚未得到充分利用。我们评估了种子性状(质量和形状)和两种打破休眠的处理方法(去痕和赤霉素)对四种大型藻类低温分层后种子萌发的影响。对所有物种而言,尽管种子存活率相对较高(42%-90%),但未经处理的种子均未发芽(发芽率为 0%)。对 Potamogeton illinoensis 和 P. natans 而言,去痕加赤霉素能最大程度地提高发芽率,分别达到 83% 和 35%(根据存活率校正)。另外两个物种则完全(Brasenia schreberi)或绝大多数(Nuphar variegata)未发芽。对于两个萌发的物种,萌发概率随种子质量(P. natans 和 P. illinoensis)和伸长率(P. natans)的增加而增加。虽然性状效应相对于种子处理效应的影响较小,表明后者对重新植被工作更为重要,但性状模式突显了种子大小投资的进化权衡。我们研究的两个 Potamogeton 物种显示了通过播种进行植被重建的前景,而 B. schreberi 和 N. variegata 的休眠期尚未得到充分开发,因此这些物种无法用于播种植被重建。
Effects of seed traits and dormancy break treatments on germination of four aquatic plant species
Germination biology and dormancy-breaking requirements of fully aquatic (submerged and floating) plant species remain relatively understudied. This is a significant impediment to efforts to restore vegetation in freshwater systems, where the abundance of seeds, and possibility of sowing them in large numbers, suggests underutilized potential for active revegetation. We assessed the influence of seed traits (mass and shape) and two treatments to break dormancy (scarification and gibberellic acid) on the germination of seeds of four macrophyte species after cold-stratification. For all species, untreated seeds did not germinate (0% rate), despite relatively high seed viability (42-90% across species). For Potamogeton illinoensis and P. natans, scarification plus gibberellic acid increased germination the most, to 83% and 35%, respectively (corrected for viability). The other two species remained wholly (Brasenia schreberi) or overwhelmingly (Nuphar variegata) ungerminated. For the two species that did germinate, germination probability increased with seed mass (P. natans and P. illinoensis) and elongation (P. natans). While the small size of trait effects relative to seed treatment effects suggests the latter are more important for revegetation work, the trait patterns highlight evolutionary tradeoffs in seed-size investments. The two Potamogeton species we examined show promise for use in revegetation via seeding, whereas B. schreberi and N. variegata dormancy break has not been adequately developed for these species to be used in seeding-based revegetation.
期刊介绍:
Aquatic Botany offers a platform for papers relevant to a broad international readership on fundamental and applied aspects of marine and freshwater macroscopic plants in a context of ecology or environmental biology. This includes molecular, biochemical and physiological aspects of macroscopic aquatic plants as well as the classification, structure, function, dynamics and ecological interactions in plant-dominated aquatic communities and ecosystems. It is an outlet for papers dealing with research on the consequences of disturbance and stressors (e.g. environmental fluctuations and climate change, pollution, grazing and pathogens), use and management of aquatic plants (plant production and decomposition, commercial harvest, plant control) and the conservation of aquatic plant communities (breeding, transplantation and restoration). Specialized publications on certain rare taxa or papers on aquatic macroscopic plants from under-represented regions in the world can also find their place, subject to editor evaluation. Studies on fungi or microalgae will remain outside the scope of Aquatic Botany.