The reversible inhibition of the germination of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) seeds in conditions which are even slightly wetter than optimal has been traced to the production, in a wet environment, of a layer of mucilage around and within the fruit coat which surrounds the true seed. Such wet seeds may however germinate readily when the temperature is lowered, or the oxygen pressure of the environment is raised, or the intact seeds are placed for a short time in hydrogen peroxide before being transferred to what normally would be an excess of water. Even in the absence of an increased oxygen supply the seeds will germinate under water provided the fruit coat, or even a small part of it where it covers the radicle, is crefully removed. No evidence has been found of a water soluble inhibitor and the findings are consistent with the hypothesis that germination is dependent on a sufficiently high rate of supply of oxygen to the sites embryonic respiration. The mucilage which is formed under wet conditions forms a barrier which prevents the transfer of oxygen to the embryo by gaseous diffusion or aqueous convection currents and restricts it to the process of aqueous diffusion, and under these conditions the rate of oxygen supply may not reach the threshold level required for germination.
SUMMARYNineteen NP experiments were carried out with wheat and barley mostly in the Mesaoria plain of Cyprus over the period 1968–78. The fields were fallowed over the season preceding the experiments. Rainfall ranged from 68 to 405 mm. Kyperounda, a tall durum wheat, Pitic 62, a semi-dwarf aestivum wheat, and Athenais barley were the test varieties. No yield was obtained when rainfall was below 100 mm. Athenais barley consistently outyielded the wheat varieties, particularly Kyperounda, by up to 200% presumably because of earlier heading, which helpedthe crop to escape drought to a certain extent.Kyperounda wheat and Athenais barley mostly responded to 35 kg N/ha but Pitic 62 benefited from up to 70 kg N/ha. Fertilizer N not taken up in a year of extremely low rainfall remained in the soil and was available to the following crop.Response to P was more marked when rainfall was below 250 mm being linear over the rates tested (highest rate 26 kg P/ha). Athenais barley responded to P more than the other varieties. Bicarbonate-soluble soil P was between 1 and 10 mg/kg.Since rainfall is unpredictable it is recommended that 20–40 kg N/ha be applied atseeding together with 13–26 kg P/ha. A similar amount of N should be top dressed in late January. The higher amount refers to the semi-dwarf Pitic 62 wheat and could be increased further if the December-January rainfall, which normally constitutes 40% of the total, is high. These rates refer to crops grown after fallow. For continuous growing the rates would probably have to be increased.
Under the hot (air temperature reaching 40 C) and dry conditions of the inland areas of Cyprus, alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) yields decline markedly in July to August. Water‐use efficiency (kg DM/m3 of water taken up) decreases from 2.25 to 2.85 in March through May to 0.50 to 0.65 kg/m3 in July through August. This study evaluated several alternatives for increasing water‐use efficiency for alfalfa production. Not irrigating the alfalfa for one growth period in July reduced yield during that period by 68%. However, not irrigating for a second or a third growth period resulted in no forage yield during these periods. When irrigation was resumed, plots not irrigated for one or two growth periods yielded as much as plots irrigated at all growth periods, but plots not irrigated for three growth periods produced 20% less yield during the first period following resumption of irrigation. In the following growth periods, however, these yielded as much as plots irrigated at all growth periods. Discontinuing irrigation for the three growth periods of July to August reduced annual dry matter yield to 17,700 kg/ha compared to 21,500 kg/ha when adequate water was applied throughout, but saved 610 mm of irrigation water out of a normal annual irrigation requirement of 1,400 mm. As a result, water‐use efficiency in 1978–1979 increased from 1.32 kg DM/m3 of water taken up when adequate irrigation was applied throughout the growing season to 1.60 when irrigation was withheld for the three growth periods of July to August. The corresponding figures for 1979–1980 were 1.41 and 1.81, respectively.
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