期刊
SEED SCIENCE RESEARCH
卷 31, 期 1, 页码 1-19出版社
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0960258520000367
关键词
asymbiotic germination; dust seeds; Monotropoideae; symbiotic germination; undifferentiated (organless) embryo; unipolar germination
Studies have shown that the germination process of dust seeds in mycoheterotrophic species is complex, especially in the three tribes under the Ericaceae family. These seeds are typically very small, with undifferentiated embryos, and require symbiosis with fungi to germinate.
'Dust seeds' with an undifferentiated (organless) embryo are known to be produced by mycoheterotrophic species (MH) in nine families of angiosperms. However, aside from the numerous studies on seed germination of orchids, relatively little is known about germination in MH families. In the Ericaceae, some degree of mycoheterotrophy (full, partial or initial) and dust seeds with an undifferentiated embryo occur in all species in the three tribes of Monotropoideae, the only subfamily of Ericaceae with this combination of characters. In most species, the seed is <0.90 mm in the greatest dimension, the endosperm is absent (Pityopus) or consists of few to many (30-40) cells, and the embryo is minute, consisting of as few as two cells in Monotropa. Germination in Monotropoideae is monopolar, with only the radicular pole of the embryo participating in germination. Thus, germination polarity differs from that of the dust seeds of orchids in which only the plumular pole of the embryo (protocorm) participates in germination. The dust seeds in Monotropoideae require the presence of fungi, either direct contact with a fungus or the presence of a diffusible substance therefrom, to germinate (symbiotic germination). Recently, representatives of the four genera of tribe Pyroleae have been successfully germinated asymbiotically in vitro. We present a broad overview of dust-size seeds in angiosperms and conclude that they should be subdivided into at least two major categories.
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