This manual is intended primarily to train seed collectors, seed-plant managers, seed analysts, and nursery managers, but it can serve as a resource for any training course in forest regeneration. It includes both temperate and tropical tree species of all intended uses. The manual covers the following topics: seed biology, seed collection, seed handling, seed-quality evaluation, seed protection, seed basics for nurseries, and seed programs. It also includes a course evaluation questionnaire and practical exercises.All parts of the course will not be suitable for all groups. The instructor can choose the pertinent material for presentation. The scope of material is wide enough to serve many purposes.
Investigations into the nature of desiccation-sensitive, or recalcitant, seed behavior have as yet failed to identify exact causes of this phenomenon. Experiments with Quercusnigra L. and Quercusalba L. were conducted to examine physiological and biochemical changes brought about by seed desiccation and to determine if there were predictable changes in seed moisture content, in enthalpy (heat content) of seed moisture, in the lipid fraction, or in seed ultrastructure as viability declined. Quercusnigra intact acorn moisture contents at 50% and 5% viability were 15% and less than 14%, respectively; those of intact Q. alba at 50% and 0% viability were much higher, 32% and 22%, respectively. Generally, it was found that as the seeds of both species dried, the moisture content of the axes remained high (26–27%), even after 9 days of drying. In Q. nigra acorns, there was little difference in average percent moisture lost per day among axes, proximal cotyledon tissue, and distal cotyledon tissue. Quercusalba acorns, however, lost moisture more rapidly from the axes than from the cotyledons. This was probably caused by the longitudinal splitting of the pericarp during the drying process. Lipids composed 28.4% of the dry weight of Q. nigra and 5.7% of Q. alba dry weight. Neither individual fatty acids nor total fatty acid content exhibited definite patterns of change over the course of the experiment. The most prevalent saturated fatty acid in both species was palmitic acid, and the most common unsaturated fatty acid was generally oleic acid. Electron microscopy studies of Q. nigra showed cell wall trauma after 3 days of drying (moisture content 23%); by day 7, when moisture content had dropped to 15.6%, there was a definite dissolution of cytoplasmic density and a reduction of spherosome concentration. Quercusalba exhibited similar responses to drying, but cell wall integrity was maintained. Differential scanning calorimetry studies revealed strong relationships between onset and enthalpy values of all acorn tissues and percent germination, as did regressions involving moisture content and seed germination.
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