Maity Aniruddha, Lamichaney Amrit, Joshi Dinesh Chandra, Bajwa Ali, Subramanian Nithya, Walsh Michael, Bagavathiannan Muthukumar
Department of Soil and Crop Sciences, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, United States.
Seed Technology Division, ICAR-Indian Grassland and Fodder Research Institute, Jhansi, India.
Front Plant Sci. 2021 Jun 16;12:657773. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2021.657773. eCollection 2021.
Seed shattering refers to the natural shedding of seeds when they ripe, a phenomenon typically observed in wild and weedy plant species. The timing and extent of this phenomenon varies considerably among plant species. Seed shattering is primarily a genetically controlled trait; however, it is significantly influenced by environmental conditions, management practices and their interactions, especially in agro-ecosystems. This trait is undesirable in domesticated crops where consistent efforts have been made to minimize it through conventional and molecular breeding approaches. However, this evolutionary trait serves as an important fitness and survival mechanism for most weeds that utilize it to ensure efficient dispersal of their seeds, paving the way for persistent soil seedbank development and sustained future populations. Weeds have continuously evolved variations in seed shattering as an adaptation under changing management regimes. High seed retention is common in many cropping weeds where weed maturity coincides with crop harvest, facilitating seed dispersal through harvesting operations, though some weeds have notoriously high seed shattering before crop harvest. However, high seed retention in some of the most problematic agricultural weed species such as annual ryegrass (), wild radish (), and weedy amaranths (s spp.) provides an opportunity to implement innovative weed management approaches such as harvest weed seed control, which aims at capturing and destroying weed seeds retained at crop harvest. The integration of such management options with other practices is important to avoid the rapid evolution of high seed shattering in target weed species. Advances in genetics and molecular biology have shown promise for reducing seed shattering in important crops, which could be exploited for manipulating seed shattering in weed species. Future research should focus on developing a better understanding of various seed shattering mechanisms in plants in relation to changing climatic and management regimes.
种子散落是指种子成熟时自然脱落的现象,这一现象常见于野生植物和杂草物种中。不同植物物种的种子散落时间和程度差异很大。种子散落主要是一种受基因控制的性状;然而,它会受到环境条件、管理措施及其相互作用的显著影响,在农业生态系统中尤其如此。在驯化作物中,人们一直通过传统育种和分子育种方法努力将这种性状降至最低,因此它不受欢迎。然而,这种进化性状是大多数杂草的重要适应性和生存机制,杂草利用它来确保种子的有效传播,为持续的土壤种子库发展和未来种群的延续铺平道路。随着管理方式的变化,杂草不断进化出种子散落方面的变异以适应环境。许多作物田杂草在杂草成熟与作物收获时间一致时,种子滞留率较高,这有助于通过收获作业实现种子传播,不过有些杂草在作物收获前种子散落率极高。然而,一些最具问题的农业杂草物种,如一年生黑麦草、野萝卜和杂草苋属植物,种子滞留率较高,这为实施创新的杂草管理方法提供了机会,例如收获杂草种子控制,其目的是捕获并销毁作物收获时滞留的杂草种子。将这种管理措施与其他措施相结合,对于避免目标杂草物种迅速进化出高种子散落率很重要。遗传学和分子生物学的进展显示出在重要作物中降低种子散落率的前景,这可用于控制杂草物种的种子散落。未来的研究应着重于更好地理解植物中与不断变化的气候和管理方式相关的各种种子散落机制。