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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Seed germination under osmotic stress across different wild populations of mountain rye (Secale strictum (C.Presl) C.Presl))

Simone OrsenigoLuciano Di MartinoValter Di CeccoIlda VaggeGraziano RossiCharlotte BicklerPaolo CauzziFilippo GuzzonGianniantonio DominaJonas V. MüllerDomenico Gargano

subject

0106 biological sciencesOsmotic shockSettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaDrought toleranceForagePlant ScienceBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesAgronomyGerminationSecale strictumSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataCultivarEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)Crop wild relatives drought tolerance forage crop seed ecology seed germination010606 plant biology & botanyForage crop

description

The selection of resilient cultivars could help stem the losses in forage production due to a changing climate. Secale strictum is a wild grass with interesting potential as a forage crop. We studied the germination requirements of six wild S. strictum populations, representative of the whole species distribution range in Italy and occurring under different osmotic conditions (0 MPa, −0.8 MPa, −1.0 MPa, −1.2 MPa, −1.4 MPa and −1.6 MPa). Our aim was to find beneficial seed and germination traits for the possible use of this species as a crop. Different accessions of domesticated Secale cereale and ×Triticosecale were used as comparison. Some populations of S. strictum were drought tolerant at germination level (final germination > 25% at −1.6 MPa). A great variability was observed among wild populations in traits that currently limit the cultivation of the species as a forage crop (seed size, germinability) and that could improve its usage, especially in arid areas (water stress tolerance, fast germination). A correlation exists between the germination rates of wild populations and the seasonality of the rainfall at their natural growing sites. These results underline the importance of choosing appropriate source lineages when selecting S. strictum populations for crop development.

https://doi.org/10.1080/11263504.2020.1857869