Does acorn weight influence germination and subsequent seedling growth of Central Himalayan oaks


Citation

Rikhari H. C., . and Tamta S., . and Palni L. M. S., . and Purohit V. K., . and Nandi S. K., . Does acorn weight influence germination and subsequent seedling growth of Central Himalayan oaks. pp. 483-492. ISSN 0128-1283

Abstract

The effect of acorn weight on germination and subsequent seedling performance in terms of survival growth and dry matter accumulation was studied for two important central Himalayan oak species Quercus leucotrichophora (Banj oak) and Q. semecarpifolia (Khanu oak). A wide variation in acorn size and fresh weight existed within these species and germination was found to be correlated with acorn weight. The larger acorns showed higher germination (65.6 and 53.3 for Q. leucotrichophora and Q. semecarpifolia respectively) compared with medium and smaller acorns. Higher survival and height increment was recorded in seedlings that emerged from larger acorns for both the species in comparison to medium and smaller acorns. Dry matter accumulation in seedlings derived from acorns of different weight classes was significantly different for various components. Total mass for seedlings derived from larger acorns was about 45 and 31 higher for Q. leucotrichophora and Q. semecarpifolia respectively compared with seedlings obtained from acorns of medium weight. Relative growth rate of seedlings was found to increase with increasing acorn weight and seedling shoot height whereas a reverse trend was recorded for stem height:stem dry mass ratio. This study has implications for the forestry plantation programmes.


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Abstract

The effect of acorn weight on germination and subsequent seedling performance in terms of survival growth and dry matter accumulation was studied for two important central Himalayan oak species Quercus leucotrichophora (Banj oak) and Q. semecarpifolia (Khanu oak). A wide variation in acorn size and fresh weight existed within these species and germination was found to be correlated with acorn weight. The larger acorns showed higher germination (65.6 and 53.3 for Q. leucotrichophora and Q. semecarpifolia respectively) compared with medium and smaller acorns. Higher survival and height increment was recorded in seedlings that emerged from larger acorns for both the species in comparison to medium and smaller acorns. Dry matter accumulation in seedlings derived from acorns of different weight classes was significantly different for various components. Total mass for seedlings derived from larger acorns was about 45 and 31 higher for Q. leucotrichophora and Q. semecarpifolia respectively compared with seedlings obtained from acorns of medium weight. Relative growth rate of seedlings was found to increase with increasing acorn weight and seedling shoot height whereas a reverse trend was recorded for stem height:stem dry mass ratio. This study has implications for the forestry plantation programmes.

Additional Metadata

[error in script]
Item Type: Article
AGROVOC Term: Acorns
AGROVOC Term: Germination
AGROVOC Term: Seedlings
AGROVOC Term: Survival
AGROVOC Term: Growth
AGROVOC Term: Dry matter content
AGROVOC Term: Quercus
AGROVOC Term: Growth rate
AGROVOC Term: Forestry
AGROVOC Term: Plantations
Depositing User: Ms. Suzila Mohamad Kasim
Last Modified: 24 Apr 2025 06:27
URI: http://webagris.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/22311

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