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(American Journal of Botany. 2002;89:1779-1784.)
© 2002 Botanical Society of America, Inc.


Reproductive Biology

Ecophysiology of seed germination in Erythronium japonicum (Liliaceae) with underdeveloped embryos1

Tetsuya Kondo2,4, Nori Okubo2, Taku Miura2, Kazushige Honda3 and Yukio Ishikawa3

2Graduate School of Agriculture, Hokkaido University, Kita-ku, Sapporo 060-8589, Japan; 3Department of Forestry and Landscape Architecture, Hokkaido College, Senshu University, Bibai 079-0197, Japan

Erythronium japonicum (Liliaceae) (Japanese name, katakuri) is indigenous to Japan and adjacent Far East regions. We examined their embryo elongation, germination, and seedling emergence in relationship to the temperature. In incubators, seeds did not germinate at 20°/10° (light 12 h/dark 12 h alternating temperature), 20°, 15°, 5°, or 0°C with a 12-h light photoperiod for 200 d. They germinated at 15°/5° or 10°C, starting on day 135. If seeds were kept at 20° or at 25°/15°C before being exposed to 5°C, the seeds germinated, but if kept at 25° or 30°C they did not. Embryos at 25°/15°C grew to half the seed length without germinating; at 0° or 5°C, embryos elongated little. Embryos grew and seeds germinated when kept at 25°/15°C for 90 d and then at 5°C. In the field, seeds are dispersed in mid-June in Hokkaido and in Honshu, mid-May to mid-June. Seeds do not germinate immediately after dispersal because the embryo is underdeveloped. Embryos elongated at medium temperatures in autumn after summer heat, and germination ends in November at 8°/0°C. After germination, seedling emergence was delayed, and most seedlings were observed in early April around the snowmelt when soil cover was 2–3 mm.

Key Words: ecophysiology • embryo elongation • Erythronium japonicum • seed germination • seedling emergence • temperature




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T. Kondo, C. Sato, J. M. Baskin, and C. C. Baskin
Post-dispersal embryo development, germination phenology, and seed dormancy in Cardiocrinum cordatum var. glehnii (Liliaceae s. str.), a perennial herb of the broadleaved deciduous forest in Japan
Am. J. Botany, June 1, 2006; 93(6): 849 - 859.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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