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Animal Production Science Animal Production Science Society
Food, fibre and pharmaceuticals from animals
RESEARCH ARTICLE

The effect of high temperature pretreatments on germination of Townsville stylo seed material

AM Holm

Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture and Animal Husbandry 13(61) 190 - 192
Published: 1973

Abstract

Townsville stylo cv. Gordon dehulled seed and intact pods were exposed to temperatures ranging from 40° to 11 5°C for between 12 and 48 hours in the expectation that a method of reducing hardseededness could be devised. Dry heat temperatures of 75° and 95°C markedly decreased the level of hardseededness in both dehulled seed and intact pods. A temperature of 11 5°C for 12 hours was sufficient to kill all seeds and pods. Fifty per cent germination was achieved after 2.5 days for dehulled seeds and after 5 days for pods exposed to a pretreatment of 95°C. Untreated scarified dehulled seeds took only 1.5 days to achieve 50 per cent germination. It was suggested that a suitable heat pretreatment on Townsville stylo pods should result in a seed material with a soft-seed level similar to dehulled scarified seed, yet with the pods still retaining considerable immunity from 'false starts' to the wet season.

https://doi.org/10.1071/EA9730190

© CSIRO 1973

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