Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4527828 Aquatic Botany 2014 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Sarcocornia ambigua is a widespread halophyte of the Atlantic coast of South America.•Higher germination (81–84%) after 22 days occurred at salinities 0 and 5 g NaCl L−1.•S. ambigua seeds were able to germinate (3%) even in 45 g NaCl L−1.•Osmotically induced inhibition of germination is reversible by salt relief.

Sarcocornia ambigua is a perennial halophyte of the Atlantic coast of South America. The species occurs in salt marshes and mangrove swamps and is able to grow under hypersaline conditions. S. ambigua seeds were collected from two intertidal populations located inside and at the entrance of the Patos Lagoon estuary (RS, Brazil). The seeds were germinated by incubation for 22 days in 0, 5, 15, 30 and 45 g NaCl L−1 solutions at 20–30 °C and with a 12:12 h photoperiod. There were no significant differences in germination between S. ambigua populations. High average germination (81–84%) occurred at low salinities (0 and 5 g NaCl L−1) and decreased at salinities of 15 g NaCl L−1 (41–46%) and above. Seeds were able to germinate (3%) even in 45 g NaCl L−1. Both populations of S. ambigua demonstrated an inhibition of germination under saline conditions. This inhibition was reversible through removal of the salt stress. The percentage of unviable seeds increased from 4% to 11–18% as the salinity increased from 5 to 15–40 g NaCl L−1. The germinative responses to salinity of S. ambigua are typical of an extreme halophyte. The predominant outflow tendency of the waters in the study area and the choked morphology of Patos Lagoon favour the flux of seeds between marshes in the middle estuary and at the narrow estuarine inlet, preventing local differentiation of S. ambigua populations.

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Aquatic Science
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