Morphology, germination, and storage behaviour in seeds of Tuscan populations of Fritillaria montana (Liliaceae), a rare perennial geophyte in Italy

Fritillaria montana Hoppe ex W.D.J.Koch (Liliaceae) is a rare perennial geophyte growing in south-eastern Europe. Although it occurs in most of the Italian territory, it is very rare and is included in the Red List of threatened plant species of most of the regions in which it grows; in Tuscany (central Italy), it is listed as Critically Endangered. The aim of our study was to investigate the seed size, weight, and morphology; the seed moisture and oil contents; the seed germination conditions; and the effect of different storage treatments on final germination success in F. montana. Seeds were collected from the only Tuscan population that set fruit in 2008, and they were then subjected to morphometric, moisture, and oil content measurements; germination tests; and different storage conditions. Morphometric measurements and shape index evidenced the flat and drop-like shape of the seeds, which have a moisture content of 14.62% and an oil content of 1.09%. They need a period of cold stratification to break dormancy and germinate, with a final percentage of 77.5%. The germination percentage after storage at 5 °C was 70%, while after storage in a drying room it was 55.2%. The differences between the final germination percentage of fresh seeds and treated seeds were only weakly significant. In the short time allotted for the trial, seeds of F. montana showed a good tolerance to drying and a potential predisposition to ex situ conservation techniques.

Morphology, germination, and storage behaviour in seeds of Tuscan populations of Fritillaria montana (Liliaceae), a rare perennial geophyte in Italy

Fritillaria montana Hoppe ex W.D.J.Koch (Liliaceae) is a rare perennial geophyte growing in south-eastern Europe. Although it occurs in most of the Italian territory, it is very rare and is included in the Red List of threatened plant species of most of the regions in which it grows; in Tuscany (central Italy), it is listed as Critically Endangered. The aim of our study was to investigate the seed size, weight, and morphology; the seed moisture and oil contents; the seed germination conditions; and the effect of different storage treatments on final germination success in F. montana. Seeds were collected from the only Tuscan population that set fruit in 2008, and they were then subjected to morphometric, moisture, and oil content measurements; germination tests; and different storage conditions. Morphometric measurements and shape index evidenced the flat and drop-like shape of the seeds, which have a moisture content of 14.62% and an oil content of 1.09%. They need a period of cold stratification to break dormancy and germinate, with a final percentage of 77.5%. The germination percentage after storage at 5 °C was 70%, while after storage in a drying room it was 55.2%. The differences between the final germination percentage of fresh seeds and treated seeds were only weakly significant. In the short time allotted for the trial, seeds of F. montana showed a good tolerance to drying and a potential predisposition to ex situ conservation techniques.

___

  • Bartolucci F, Caparelli KF & Peruzzi L (2009). A biometric study of Fritillaria montana Hoppe ex W.D.J. Koch s.l. (Liliaceae) shows a single polymorphic species, with no infraspecifi c taxa. Pl Biosystems 143: 516-527.
  • Baskin CC & Baskin JM (2001). Seeds: Ecology, Biogeography, and Evolution of Dormancy and Germination. London: Academic Press.
  • Baskin JM & Baskin CC (2004). A classifi cation system for seed dormancy. Seed Sci Res 14: 1-16.
  • Baskin JM, Baskin CC & Li X (2000). Taxonomy, anatomy and evolution of physical dormancy in seeds. Pl Sp Biol 15: 139-152.
  • Carasso V, Hay FR, Probert RJ & Mucciarelli M (2011). Temperature control of seed germination in Fritillaria tubiformis subsp. moggridgei (Liliaceae), a rare endemic of the South-west Alps. Seed Sci Res 21: 33-38.
  • Cerabolini B, Ceriani RM, Caccianiga M, De Andreis R & Raimondi B (2003). Seed size, shape and persistence in soil: a test on Italian fl ora from Alps to Mediterranean coasts. Seed Sci Res 13: 75-85.
  • Chen Y, Zhang J & Li XE (1993). Temperature requirements for aft erripening of the embryo of Fritillaria cirrhosa Don.f. China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 18: 270-272, 317 (in Chinese).
  • Conti F, Manzi A & Pedrotti F (1997). Liste Rosse regionali delle piante d’Italia. Camerino: WWF and Società Botanica Italiana.
  • ENSCONET (2009). ENSCONET Curation Protocols & Recommendations. Kew: Royal Botanic Gardens.
  • Finch-Savage WE & Leubner-Metzger G (2006). Seed dormancy and the control of germination. New Phytol 171: 501-523.
  • Funes G, Basconcelo S, Diaz S & Cabido M (1999). Seed size and shape are good predictors of seed persistence in soil in temperate mountain grasslands of Argentina. Seed Sci Res 9: 341-345.
  • Garbari F & Betti S (2005). Fritillaria orientalis (Liliaceae) nuova per le Alpi Apuane. Atti della Società Toscana di Scienze Naturali - Memorie Serie B 111: 155.
  • Gosling PG (2004). Viability testing. In: Smith R, Dickie J, Linington S, Pritchard H & Probert R. (eds.) Seed Conservation: Turning Science into Practice, pp. 445-481. Kew: Royal Botanic Gardens.
  • Kamari G (1991). Th e genus Fritillaria L. in Greece: taxonomy and karyology. Bot Chronika 10: 255-270.
  • Kondo T, Okubo N, Miura T, Honda K & Ishikawa Y (2002). Ecophysiology of seed germination in Erythronium japonicum (Liliaceae) with underdeveloped embryos. Am J Bot 89: 1779- 84.
  • Kondo T, Sato C, Baskin JM & Baskin CC (2006). Post-dispersal embryo development, germination phenology, and seed dormancy in Cardiocrinum cordatum var. glehnii (Liliaceae s. str.), a perennial herb of the broadleaved deciduous forest in Japan. Am J Bot 93: 849-59.
  • Leishman MR & Westoby M (1998). Seed size and shape are not related to persistence in soil in Australia in the same way as in Britain. Funct Ecol 12: 480-485.
  • Mancuso E & Peruzzi L (2010). Male individuals in cultivated Fritillaria persica (Liliaceae): real androdioecy or gender disphasy? Turk J Bot 34: 435-440.
  • Marossy A (2007). Wild plant species endangered through intensive harvest. In: Gaft a D & Akeroyd J (eds.) Nature Conservation, pp. 65-67. Berlin: Springer.
  • Martin AC (1946). Th e comparative internal morphology of seeds. American Midland Naturalist 36: 513-660.
  • Moles AT, Hodson DW & Webb CJ (2000). Seed size, shape and persistence in the soil in the New Zealand fl ora. Oikos 89: 541- 545.
  • Peruzzi L, Leitch IJ & Caparelli KF (2009). Chromosome diversity and evolution in Liliaceae. Ann Bot (London) 103: 459-475.
  • Peruzzi L, Mancuso E, Ansaldi M, De Angeli E & Trombetti G (2008). Distribuzione, caratterizzazione e consistenza delle popolazioni toscane di Fritillaria montana Hoppe (Liliaceae). Webbia 63: 309-315.
  • Pignatti S (1982). Flora d’Italia 3. Bologna: Edagricole.
  • R Development Core Team (2007). R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing. Vienna: R Foundation for Statistical Computing. Available at http://www.R-project.org [accessed 1 June 2011].
  • Rix EM (1980). Fritillaria L. In: Tutin TG, Burges NA, Chater AO, Edmondson JR, Heywood VH, Moore DM, Valentine DH, Walters SM & Webb DA (eds.) Flora Europaea, Vol. 5, pp. 31- 34. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Rix EM (2001). Fritillaria: A Revised Classifi cation. Edinburgh: Th e Fritillaria Group of the Alpine Garden Society.
  • Tamura MN (1998). Liliaceae. In: Kubitzki K (ed.) Th e Families and Genera of Vascular Plants. III. Flowering Plants - Monocotyledons, Lilianae (except Orchidaceae), pp. 343-353. Berlin: Springer.
  • Th ompson K, Bakker JP & Bekker RM (1997). Th e Soil Seed Banks of North West Europe: Methodology, Density and Longevity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Th ompson K, Bakker JP, Bekker RM & Hodgson JG (1998). Ecological correlates of seed persistence in soil in the north- west European fl ora. J Ecol 86: 163-169.
  • Th ompson K, Band SR & Hodgson JG (1993). Seed size and shape predict persistence in soil. Funct Ecol 7: 236-241.
  • Th ompson K, Jalili A, Hodgson JG, Hamzeh’ee B, Asri Y, Shaw S, Shirvany A, Yazdani S, Khoshnevis M, Zarrinkamar F, Ghahramani MA & Safavi R (2001). Seed size, shape and persistence in the soil in an Iranian fl ora. Seed Sci Res 11: 345- 355.
  • Tomović G, Vukojićić S, Niketic M, Zlatkovic B & Stevanović V (2007). Fritillaria (Liliaceae) in Serbia: distribution, habitats and some taxonomic notes. Phytologia Balcanica 13: 359-370.