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Plant Physiology 50:201-204 (1972)
© 1972 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Antagonistic Effects of High and Low Temperature Pretreatments on the Germination and Pregermination Ethylene Synthesis of Lettuce Seeds 1

A. N. Burdett

a Photobiology Group, Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby 2, British Columbia, Canada

Red light-induced germination of Grand Rapids lettuce seeds (Lactuca sativa L.) incubated at 20 C was inhibited if the seeds were first imbibed at 30 C for 36 hours. This effect was counteracted by exogenous ethylene and associated with a reduction in the rate at which the seeds produced ethylene throughout the pregermination period. A chilling treatment reversed the effect of a prior imbibition at 30 C on both germination and ethylene production. The possibility that the pretreatments influence germination through their effects on ethylene production is discussed.

Other evidence presented indicates that the inability of seeds to germinate at supraoptimal temperature is not due either to a rapid loss of far red-absorbing phytochrome or to an inadequate capacity for ethylene synthesis. It was also shown that a chilling treatment potentiated germination at high temperature without affecting the ethylene synthetic capacity of the seeds.


1 The research was supported in part by Canadian National Research Council Grant A2908.







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ASPB Publications PLANT PHYSIOLOGY® THE PLANT CELL
Copyright © 1972 by the American Society of Plant Biologists