Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) seed is collected from both forest stands after final felling and from seed orchards. To produce high-germinability seed lots that are easy to use in nursery sowing machines, empty, insect-damaged, and other poor-quality seeds are culled. Sorting is done typically by weight or size. Previous studies of conifer seed have indicated wide variation in seed weight between individual trees or clones. However, the intratree or intraclone variations have rarely been taken into account, and intracone variation in seed weight has not been examined. We collected cones from a forest stand and from a clonal seed orchard in central Finland. Each seed from each cone was extracted, weighed, and x-rayed to assess their quality. Trees and clones differed in terms of the proportions of different quality seed. Variance component analysis showed that the intracone variation explained a larger proportion of the total variation in seed weight than did the intercone/intertree or interclone variations. Thus weight-based seed sorting has less effect on the genetic diversity of a seed lot than previously believed. We also conclude that the large differences in proportion of full seed among trees and clones impact the contribution of genotypes in seed and, eventually, in seedling lots.
Seed soak-sorting prior to sowing affects the size and quality of 1.5-year-old containerized Picea abies seedlings Himanen K., Nygren M. (2015). Seed soak-sorting prior to sowing affects the size and quality of 1.5-year-old containerized Picea abies seedlings. Silva Fennica vol. 49 no. 3 article id 1056. 14 p.
Highlights• After soak-sorting all sunken seeds (bottom fraction) were full and viable, whereas floating seeds contained larvae-filled and immature seed.• Seedlings originating from the bottom fraction were greater in height and diameter than control seedlings or those originating from the floating seeds.• The proportion of saleable seedlings was four percentage points higher in the bottom fraction than in the other seedlings.
AbstractWe studied the effect of soak-sorting Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) H. Karst.) seeds on emergence, development and quality of container seedlings in two commercial seed lots. The seeds, separated by soaking into bottom and surface fractions, were sown in June, and the seedlings were grown during two growing seasons under typical Finnish nursery conditions. The first summer seedlings were grown in a greenhouse and outdoors for the second, full growing season. All sunken seeds were full and viable according to radiography, whereas the floating seeds contained 2% and 13% larvae-filled and 8% and 11% anatomically immature seeds, depending on the seed lot. Seedlings grown from the bottom fraction seed emerged 2.5-3.5 days earlier than seedlings of storage dry (i.e. control) seed. Height, diameter, and shoot and root dry mass of the seedlings were affected by soaking after both the first and second growing seasons. The largest seedlings originated from the bottom fraction. The proportion of saleable seedlings was four percentage points higher in the bottom fraction than in the other seedlings. The effects of soaking found in this study are more notable than as previously reported for Norway spruce seedlings. This suggests that soaking and soak-sorting may be most useful when the growing conditions are stressful, i.e. when seeds are sown in summer rather than 1-year-old seedling crops sown in spring under the climate conditions typical of Finland.
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