Inhibition by pulp juice and enhancement by ingestion on germination of bird-dispersedPrunus seeds |
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Authors: | Tsutomu Yagihashi Mitsuhiro Hayashida Toshizumi Miyamoto |
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Affiliation: | (1) Regeneration Process Laboratory, Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute, 305-8687 Ibaraki, Japan;(2) Department of Bioenvironment, Faculty of Agriculture, Yamagata University, 997-8555 Tsuruoka, Japan;(3) Ibaraki Prefectural Government Forestry Technology Center, 311-0122 Naka, Ibaraki, Japan |
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Abstract: | To evaluate what prevents seed germination and why ingestion by birds enhances germination, we carried out germination experiments using bird-dispersed seeds of twoPrunus species (Prunus sargentii andP. ssiori) in the laboratory. Germination of seeds with following four treatments was compared: “Ingested seeds” excreted after feeding of fruits to birds; “Extracted seeds” deliberately extracted from the fruit pulp; “Juiced seeds” which were supplemented with the juice of the pulp after seeds had been deliberately extracted from the pulp; and “Intact seeds” in untreated whole fruits. Many ingested (27%, 23% inP. sargentii, 18% inP. ssiori) and extracted seeds (24% inP. sargentii, 17% inP. ssiori) germinated, and difference in germination percentages between ingested and extracted seeds were not significant, for eitherPrunus species. The Juiced seeds rarely germinated (2% inP. sargentii, 6% inP. ssiori), and seeds within intact fruits did not germinate. These results suggest that the fruit pulp and the juice of the pulp inhibit germination and the seeds could germinate without ingestion by birds once they had been manually extracted from pulp. Therefore, it is considered that bird ingestion enahnces germination by removing pulp, especially juice of the pulp, in these twoPrunus species. |
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Keywords: | bird ingestion fruit pulp inhibition Prunus seed germination |
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