Zalamea Paul-Camilo, Sarmiento Carolina, Arnold A Elizabeth, Davis Adam S, Dalling James W
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Ancon, Panama.
School of Plant Sciences and Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, The University of Arizona Tucson, AZ, USA.
Front Plant Sci. 2015 Jan 13;5:799. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2014.00799. eCollection 2014.
Germination from the soil seed bank (SSB) is an important determinant of species composition in tropical forest gaps, with seed persistence in the SSB allowing trees to recruit even decades after dispersal. The capacity to form a persistent SSB is often associated with physical dormancy, where seed coats are impermeable at the time of dispersal. Germination literature often speculates, without empirical evidence, that dormancy-break in physically dormant seeds is the result of microbial action and/or abrasion by soil particles. We tested the microbial/soil abrasion hypothesis in four widely distributed neotropical pioneer tree species (Apeiba membranacea, Luehea seemannii, Ochroma pyramidale, and Cochlospermum vitifolium). Seeds were buried in five common gardens in a lowland tropical forest in Panama, and recovered at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months after burial. Seed permeability, microbial infection, seed coat thickness, and germination were measured. Parallel experiments compared the germination fraction of fresh and aged seeds without soil contact, and in seeds as a function of seed permeability. Contrary to the microbial/soil abrasion hypothesis the proportion of permeable seeds, and of seeds infected by cultivable microbes, decreased as a function of burial duration. Furthermore, seeds stored in dark and dry conditions for 2 years showed a higher proportion of seed germination than fresh seeds in identical germination conditions. We determined that permeable seeds of A. membranacea and O. pyramidale had cracks in the chalazal area or lacked the chalazal plug, whereas all surfaces of impermeable seeds were intact. Our results are inconsistent with the microbial/soil abrasion hypothesis of dormancy loss and instead suggest the existence of multiple dormancy phenotypes, where a fraction of each seed cohort is dispersed in a permeable state and germinates immediately, while the impermeable seed fraction accounts for the persistent SSB. Thus, we conclude that fluctuations in the soil temperature in the absence of soil abrasion and microbial infection are sufficient to break physical dormancy on seeds of tropical pioneer trees.
从土壤种子库(SSB)中萌发是热带森林林窗物种组成的一个重要决定因素,种子在SSB中的持久性使得树木即使在传播数十年后仍能实现更新。形成持久性SSB的能力通常与物理休眠有关,即种子在传播时种皮不透水。发芽文献常常在没有实证依据的情况下推测,物理休眠种子的休眠打破是微生物作用和/或土壤颗粒磨损的结果。我们对四种广泛分布的新热带先锋树种(膜叶阿沛豆、西曼吕宋豆、轻木和葡萄叶卷柏)的微生物/土壤磨损假说进行了测试。将种子埋在巴拿马低地热带森林的五个共同花园中,并在埋后1、3、6和12个月进行回收。测量种子的渗透性、微生物感染情况、种皮厚度和发芽率。平行实验比较了无土壤接触情况下新鲜种子和老化种子的发芽率,以及种子发芽率与种子渗透性的关系。与微生物/土壤磨损假说相反,可渗透种子的比例以及被可培养微生物感染的种子比例随埋藏时间的延长而降低。此外,在黑暗干燥条件下储存2年的种子在相同发芽条件下比新鲜种子表现出更高的发芽率。我们确定,膜叶阿沛豆和轻木的可渗透种子在合点区域有裂缝或没有合点塞,而不可渗透种子的所有表面都是完整的。我们的结果与休眠丧失的微生物/土壤磨损假说不一致,而是表明存在多种休眠表型,其中每个种子群体的一部分以可渗透状态传播并立即发芽,而不可渗透的种子部分构成了持久性SSB。因此,我们得出结论,在没有土壤磨损和微生物感染的情况下,土壤温度的波动足以打破热带先锋树种种子的物理休眠。