- Seed hibernation
Seed hibernation is different from seed dormancy. While seed dormancy can be defined as "a seed not germinating when conditions, e.g. light, water/nutrient availability or the presence of activating substances like smoke, are favourable", hibernation is the ability of a
seed to remain inhibernation when there is a lack of things essential to its development (water ,sunlight ,nutrient s, etc.) or in harsh conditions (extreme cold, extreme heat, hard ground, etc.). There is no specific time limit in which a seed may hibernate; some seeds found in the Arctic grew after an estimated 10,000 years. When conditions are right for the particular type of seed, they can come out ofhibernation and grow.Seeds display hibernation for very short periods of time every
year . Inautumn , seeds produced insummer may have a chance to grow while thesoil is still warm, but instead do not grow until spring. The seeds have chemicals encoded into them that will not allow them to germinate until the soil warms up again, a sign of spring. This is called "after ripening".Seeds may also go into hibernation for other causes. Many pines have adapted to forest fires that destroy trees by creating pine cones that open in extreme heat (
fire ) and release seeds coated with a material that will break down only in extreme heat. The seeds hibernate until this happens.Seeds of the "Canna Lily", and other plants, have a hard coating that must be broken down by contact with rough rock,
soil , etc. before they begin to grow. Until the shell is broken and water reaches the seed, the seed remains dormant.When released, some seeds (especially those in a desert environment) must wait for rain before the seed is triggered out of hibernation and begins to grow.
There are many other causes of
dormancy . It is an unclear phenomenon; the limits of seed hibernation are still unknown, and many triggers have yet to be discovered.Sources
* [http://pleasanton.k12.ca.us/avhsweb/thiel/creek/ap2002/amanda/intro2.html Introduction to seeds] (accessed: January 31, 2006)↑ Peter Scott, Lecturer in Plant Developmental Biology, University of Sussex
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