Plant Science

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Transcript Plant Science

Plant Science
Plant Growth & Development:
Seed Germination
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Seeds
• The life cycle of many plants begins with a
seed. Seeds are essential for the survival
and continued existence of many plant
species.
• Seeds contain the genetic material to
produce another plant with identical, similar,
or unlike characteristics of the parent plant.
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Seeds
• All seeds contain an embryo and have their
own food supply.
• The embryo consists of a plumule,
epicotyl, cotyledons, hypocotyl, and a
radicle.
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Seeds
• The plumule includes the young primordial
leaves and growing point of the stem.
Plumule
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Seeds
• The epicotyl is the portion of the stem above
the cotyledon.
Epicotyl
Epicotyl
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Seeds
• The cotyledons are the seed leaves used for
food storage.
Cotyledons
Cotyledon
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Seeds
• The hypocotyl is the portion of the stem
below the cotyledons.
Hypocotyl
Hypocotyl
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Seeds
• The radicle is the young embryonic root
and root tip.
Radicle
Radicle
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Seed Classification
• Flowering plants are classified as
monocotyledons (monocots) or
dicotyledons (dicots) depending on
how many cotyledons they possess,
one or two.
• A cotyledon is a part of a plant that
either stores food or grows to become
the first leaves to undergo
photosynthesis.
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Seed Classification
• Seeds of dicot plants have two cotyledons.
• Seeds of monocot plants have one cotyledon.
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Dicot
Epicotyl
Plumule
Hypocotyl
Radicle
Micropyle
Hilum
Cotyledons
Seed Coat
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Monocot
Endosperm
Cotyledon
Coleoptile
Epicotyl
Axis of Embryo
Hypocotyl
Radicle
Coleorhiza
Pedicel
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Dicots
Dicots include: Garden beans, legumes,
alfalfa, soybeans, and cowpeas.
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Monocots
Corn, wheat, rice, and oats are typical
monocots.
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Seed Germination
Factors affecting seed germination:
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Moisture
Temperature
Oxygen
Light
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Moisture
•
A seed must have an ample supply of
moisture for germination to occur.
•
Moisture content needed for germination
to occur ranges from 25% to 75%.
•
Once the germination process begins, a
dry period or lack of water will cause the
death of the developing embryo.
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Temperature
•
Temperature affects both the germination
percentage and the germination rate.
•
Germination rate is lower at low
temperatures.
•
Most plant seeds germinate at an optimum
temperature range of 68°F to 120°F.
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Oxygen
• Oxygen is necessary for respiration to occur
within a seed. Respiration converts the stored
food in the seed into energy for germination.
• Some seeds require less oxygen than others.
• Oxygen deficiency occurs if seeds are planted
in flooded or compacted soil.
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Light
• The presence or absence of light may or
may not have an effect on germination.
• Light is not as important as a viable seed,
germination medium, water, optimum
temperature, and oxygen.
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Seed Dormancy
• Most seeds produced by mature plants
pass through a period of inactivity or
dormancy prior to germination. During this
period of inactivity, seeds remain viable.
• Dormancy may be internal, external, or a
combination of both.
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Embryo (Internal) Dormancy
• Dormancy may occur when a mature seed
contains an underdeveloped or immature
embryo.
• Internal dormancy of most seeds involves a
period of after-ripening. After-ripening occurs
when a seed does not or is not ready to
germinate until it completes a certain stage
of development.
• Some seeds mature in the fruit but do not
germinate until released from the fruit.
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Seedcoat (External) Dormancy
• A seed may require a certain amount of
light to germinate causing the seed to
remain dormant until exposed to light.
• The seedcoat may be hard and/or thick,
preventing the absorption of water, intake
of oxygen, or physically preventing the
expansion of the embryo.
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Adverse Conditions
Conditions that may affect the viability
and germination of seeds include:
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Mechanical Injury
Diseases
Improper Storage
Age
Inadequate Growing Medium
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The Germination Process
Steps in the germination process:
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Water Absorption
Radicle Emergence
Plant Emergence
Leaf Formation
Photosynthesis
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Germination
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Water Absorption
•
The seed absorbs water and oxygen.
•
Absorbed oxygen causes the seed to swell
and increase in size.
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The seed secretes enzymes that convert
insoluble starches into soluble sugars.
•
Soluble sugars dissolve in the absorbed water
and are used as food by the plant embryo.
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Emergence of Radicle
The seed coat ruptures
permitting the young
root (radicle) to emerge
and grow downward to
anchor the plant.
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Emergence of Radicle
• In a dicot, the seed
coat (testa) splits
near the hilum, and
the young root
becomes the primary
root from which all
branching roots form.
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Emergence of Radicle
• In a monocot, the young
root breaks through the
coleorhiza (sheath).
• The primary root system
that develops from the
radicle is temporary and
is replaced later with a
fibrous root system.
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Plant Emergence
•
The above-soil-surface portion of the plant
emerges as the radicle develops into the
plant’s root system.
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In a dicot, the hypocotyl elongates, forming an
arch and pulling the cotyledons upward.
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The hypocotyl arch straightens to a vertical
position after passing through the soil surface.
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Plant Emergence
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Plant Emergence (monocot)
• In a germinating monocot
seed, no hypocotyl arch
exists to push the leaf
portions through the soil.
• Instead, the coleoptile
covering the plumule (tight
roll of leaves) pierces the
soil surface exposing the
developing plant to the
sunlight.
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Dicot Germination
Two types of seed germination occur
among dicots based on how the
seedlings emerge.
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Epigeous Germination
Hypogeous Germination
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Epigeous Germination
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In epigeous germination,
the hypocotyl of the
embryo elongates and
raises the plumule,
epicotyl, and cotyledons
through the soil surface
and above the ground.
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Garden beans have an
epigeous type of
germination.
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Epigeous Germination
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Hypogeous Germination
• In hypogeous germination,
the epicotyl elongates and
raises the plumule above the
ground.
• The cotyedons (which are
usually still enclosed by the
seed coat) and the hypocotyl
never emerge and remain
below the surface of the soil.
• Peas have a hypogeous type
of germination.
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Hypogeous Germination
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Dicot Leaf Formation
• After emerging through the soil, new
leaves form and photosynthesis begins.
• In a dicot, the hypocotyl arch straightens,
and the plumule is shed.
• The cotyledons spread apart to serve as
the first leaves to transfer food to other
parts of the plant.
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Dicot Leaf Formation
•
Once exposed to the air and the light,
the epicotyl begins to develop into the
stem and true leaves are formed.
•
The cotyledons shrivel and die as the
seedling plant uses their stored food
supply.
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Dicot Leaf Formation
• The developing true leaves continue to
photosynthesize and produce a constant
supply of food reserves.
• Hypocotyl elongation is restrained by
growth hormones.
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Monocot Leaf Formation
• After the coleoptile and plumule of a
monocot emerge, the first true leaves
begin to form.
• The food supply in the endosperm is used
up and photosynthesis begins in the true
leaves as they develop.
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Monocot Leaf Formation
• Growth hormones prevent further
development of the coleoptile and
plumule.
• At the time the coleoptile appears above
the soil surface, a second root system
begins to develop at the base of the
coleoptile to form nodal or adventitious
roots.
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