Seeds: The Ecology of Regeneration in Plant Communities 2000
DOI: 10.1079/9780851994321.0183
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Dormancy, viability and longevity.

Abstract: There are two basic physiological prerequisites for seeds to survive in soil: germination must be avoided by dormancy or quiescence, while viability must be maintained. The remarkable longevity of some individual seeds is legendary. This chapter reviews some of these accounts, assessing these long-lived individuals in the context of the overall seed population.

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Cited by 109 publications
(79 citation statements)
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“…As seeds imbibe, metabolism increases, damage may be repaired and microbial attack may be actively resisted. The effect of increasing water potential is thus completely reversed so that seed longevity increases with increase in moisture availability, provided the seeds remain dormant and air is present to allow respiration (Ibrahim et al 1983;Murdoch and Ellis 2000). Imbibed tissues and hence seed longevity are, however, very vulnerable to high temperatures, and predicted periods for 50 % loss of viability of imbibed seeds of S. hermonthica, O. crenata and O. cumana were, respectively, 98, 60 and 30 h at 45 C but only 8, 7 and 6 min at 60 C (calculated from regression coefficients in Dawoud 1995).…”
Section: Seed Survival In Moist Storagementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As seeds imbibe, metabolism increases, damage may be repaired and microbial attack may be actively resisted. The effect of increasing water potential is thus completely reversed so that seed longevity increases with increase in moisture availability, provided the seeds remain dormant and air is present to allow respiration (Ibrahim et al 1983;Murdoch and Ellis 2000). Imbibed tissues and hence seed longevity are, however, very vulnerable to high temperatures, and predicted periods for 50 % loss of viability of imbibed seeds of S. hermonthica, O. crenata and O. cumana were, respectively, 98, 60 and 30 h at 45 C but only 8, 7 and 6 min at 60 C (calculated from regression coefficients in Dawoud 1995).…”
Section: Seed Survival In Moist Storagementioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the lower temperatures, likely to characterise most moist soils, fully imbibed seeds of Orobanche and Phelipanche spp. have been shown to survive for at least 3 months at 30 C and to show negligible loss of viability over 7 months at temperatures of 10-20 C provided air is present (Kebreab and Murdoch 1999a, b;Murdoch and Ellis 2000). In comparison to drier seeds whose survival follows the viability equation (11.1), these responses are relatively poorly quantified, but seed survival curves do approximate to negative cumulative normal distributions (Dawoud 1995;Kebreab and Murdoch 1999a, b).…”
Section: Seed Survival In Moist Storagementioning
confidence: 99%
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