2005
DOI: 10.1590/s0100-29452005000100042
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Conservação das sementes de lichia (Litchi chinensis)

Abstract: Avaliou-se o comportamento das sementes de lichia após o armazenamento. Utilizou-se de nove tratamentos (0; 1; 3; 5; 7; 9; 11; 13 e 15 dias de armazenamento em câmara de germinação, à temperatura de 10ºC e UR= 80-85%). A semeadura foi realizada em bandejas de poliestireno com substrato composto por Plantmax Hortaliças® + Osmocote® 14-14-14 (5g/L de substrato). A taxa de emergência (E%) e o índice de velocidade de emergência (IVG) das plântulas da testemunha (0 dia de armazenamento) não diferiram significativam… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1

Citation Types

0
3
0
1

Year Published

2011
2011
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
4

Relationship

0
4

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 4 publications
(4 citation statements)
references
References 1 publication
0
3
0
1
Order By: Relevance
“…Some trees, such as blackberry (Antunes, 2002;Vizotto, 2008) and Brazilian guava (Andrade et al, 1993), take a relatively short time to produce fruit, which encourages their spread in orchards and gardens. Other trees, such as lychee (Bastos et al, 2006;Martins, 2005;Yamanishi, Fagundes, Machado Filho, & Sacramento, 2005) and mangaba (Anjos, Charchar, Leite, & Silva, 2009;Schmitz, Mota, & Silva Junior, 2009;Machado, Ramos, Caldas, & Vivaldi, 2004), take more time to start producing fruits and are less sought after for orchards. • Plants with thorns, such as fruit of wolf (Corrêa, Abreu, Santos, & Ribeiro, 2000), blackberry (Manica, 2000;Pereira, 2008) and cactus pear (Semedo & Barbosa, 2007;Souza, Gamarra-Rojas, Andrade, & Guerra, 2007), present major difficulties for manual harvesting.…”
Section: General Characteristics Of the Minor Fruits Of Brazilmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some trees, such as blackberry (Antunes, 2002;Vizotto, 2008) and Brazilian guava (Andrade et al, 1993), take a relatively short time to produce fruit, which encourages their spread in orchards and gardens. Other trees, such as lychee (Bastos et al, 2006;Martins, 2005;Yamanishi, Fagundes, Machado Filho, & Sacramento, 2005) and mangaba (Anjos, Charchar, Leite, & Silva, 2009;Schmitz, Mota, & Silva Junior, 2009;Machado, Ramos, Caldas, & Vivaldi, 2004), take more time to start producing fruits and are less sought after for orchards. • Plants with thorns, such as fruit of wolf (Corrêa, Abreu, Santos, & Ribeiro, 2000), blackberry (Manica, 2000;Pereira, 2008) and cactus pear (Semedo & Barbosa, 2007;Souza, Gamarra-Rojas, Andrade, & Guerra, 2007), present major difficulties for manual harvesting.…”
Section: General Characteristics Of the Minor Fruits Of Brazilmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Segundo Yamanishi et al (2005) o tratamento com sementes de lichia armazenadas por 15 dias apresenta alta taxa de emergência das plântulas (82,0%), mostrando que as sementes mantiveram sua viabilidade quando armazenadas sob temperatura de 10ºC e umidade relativa variando de 80-85%. Meletti e Coelho (2000), corroboram com esta pesquisa quando citam que as sementes de lichia podem ser armazenadas por até quatro semanas, desde que dentro do fruto, pois, quando retiradas, perdem a viabilidade rapidamente, não germinando após 14 dias.…”
Section: Resultsunclassified
“…Propagation of litchi can be carried out by sexual or vegetative methods. However, seeds present low viability and it is more used to obtain rootstocks and genetic improvement (Martins et al, 2001;Yamanishi, et al, 2005). Beyond this method, vegetative propagation can be performed by air layering (Franco et al, 2005;Smarsi, 2008;Costa et al, 2012;Lins et al, 2015) and cutting (Carvalho et al, 2005;Bastos et al, 2006;Koyama et al, 2014;Alves et al, 2016;Colombo et al, 2018), and this last method presents as advantages possibility of obtaining a large number of nursery plants from a single stock plant, less complexity of execution and lower cost of labor (Fachinello et al, 2005;Bastos et al, 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%