Physiology of Cereal Grain II. Starch Granule Formation in the Developing Barley Kernel
LH May and MS Buttrose
Australian Journal of Biological Sciences
12(2) 146 - 159
Published: 1959
Abstract
Types, numbers, volumes, and weights of starch granules in the barley endosperm were measured at different times from anthesis to maturity. The formation of two types of granule was confirmed: the first (type A) was initiated until 15 days after anthesis; the second (type B) between 18 and 30 days. At maturity there were approximately 10 times as many type B granules as type A, although the latter made up 90 per cent. of the total granule volume. There was a linear relationship between starch granule and endosperm volume throughout kernel development, while the rate of increase in volume per unit granule volume was the same, irrespective of granule size, at anyone time. Starch weight increased as endosperm dry weight increased although the precise form of this relationship is in doubt. The interrelationships between starch granule weight and volume, and also endosperm dry weight and volume, suggest that both starch granules and endosperm increase in density during development.https://doi.org/10.1071/BI9590146
© CSIRO 1959