Preprint Article Version 1 Preserved in Portico This version is not peer-reviewed

A Model for Changes in Germination Synchrony and Its Implements to Study Weed Population Dynamics: A Case Study of Brassicaceae

Version 1 : Received: 11 September 2022 / Approved: 13 September 2022 / Online: 13 September 2022 (05:37:49 CEST)

A peer-reviewed article of this Preprint also exists.

Maleki, K.; Maleki, K.; Soltani, E.; Oveisi, M.; Gonzalez-Andujar, J.L. A Model for Changes in Germination Synchrony and Its Implements to Study Weed Population Dynamics: A Case Study of Brassicaceae. Plants 2023, 12, 233. Maleki, K.; Maleki, K.; Soltani, E.; Oveisi, M.; Gonzalez-Andujar, J.L. A Model for Changes in Germination Synchrony and Its Implements to Study Weed Population Dynamics: A Case Study of Brassicaceae. Plants 2023, 12, 233.

Abstract

In every agricultural setting, weed seeds can be found in every cubic centimeter of soil. Weed seeds, as a valuable trait underlying the fate of weed populations, exhibit differing levels of seed dormancy, ensuring their survival under uncertain conditions. Seed dormancy is considered as an innate mechanism that constrains germination under suitable conditions that would otherwise stimulate germination of non-dormant seeds. This work provides new insight into changes in germination patterns along the dormant to nondormancy continuum in seeds with physiological dormancy. Notable findings are: (1) germination synchrony can act as a new parameter that quantitatively describes dormancy patterns and subsequently weed population dynamics, (2) germination synchrony is dynamic, suggesting that the more dormancy decreases, the more synchrony is obtainable, (3) after-ripening and stratification can function as a synchronizing agent that regulates germination behavior. Brassica napus showed the most synchronous germination with the value of 3.14, while lower level of germination asynchrony was for Sinapis arvensis, with the asynchrony value of 2.25. After-ripening and stratification can act as a synchronizing factor through decreasing asynchrony level and increasing synchrony. Weed establish a firm relationship between dormancy cycling and germination synchrony patterns, ensuring their survival and reproductive strategies. By germinating in synchrony, which is accompanied by cycling mechanisms, weeds have more opportunities to persist. The synchrony model used in the present study predicts germination behavior and synchrony along the dormant to nondormancy continuum in weed seeds with physiological dormancy, suggesting a useful method for quantification of germination strategies and weed population dynamics.

Keywords

dormancy continuum; conditional dormancy; physiological dormancy; synchrony pattern; weed population dynamics

Subject

Biology and Life Sciences, Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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