4.5 Article

Variable desiccation tolerance in Acer pseudoplatanus seeds in relation to developmental conditions: a case of phenotypic recalcitrance?

Journal

FUNCTIONAL PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 1, Pages 59-66

Publisher

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/FP04206

Keywords

climate change; heat sum; principal component analysis; recalcitrant seed

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Nine seedlots of the widely planted southern and central European native tree species Acer pseudoplatanus L. were collected along a north - south gradient spanning 21 degrees of latitude in Europe. We investigated how the heat sum during seed development influences seed maturity as assessed by physical, physiological and biochemical traits. Using principal component analysis we found predictable and consistent patterns in all traits, which correlated with heat sum. For example, compared with fruits from their native range ( Italy and France, heat sum > 3000 degrees C d), fruits from the coldest location ( Scotland; heat sum of 1873 degrees C d) were shorter (c. 30 v. 42 mm), germinated over a narrower temperature range ( 5 - 20 v. 5 - 35 degrees C) and had smaller embryos ( 28 v. > 70 mg) with a higher water content ( c. 63 v. 48%), less negative solute potentials ( c. - 2.4 v. - 4.1 MPa) and were more desiccation sensitive ( critical water potential of - 20.2 v. - 55.4 to - 60.7 MPa). The observed level of desiccation-tolerance for the French and Italian seedlots is more consistent with the intermediate category than the previous classification of A. pseudoplatanus as recalcitrant. Our results demonstrate that a lower heat sum causes fruits from northern Europe to be dispersed before maximum potential seed quality is achieved.

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