Science, asked by aagyeiwaa14, 2 months ago

Mark plants viable seeds, one in America during the winter and the other in Ghana. The seed in Ghana germinate but the one in America does not. Explain ​

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Answered by ltzSweetAngel
1

Answer:

Seed germination in light and dark, and responses to irradiance and light quality, were tested in shadehouse experiments for 19 West African tropical forest tree species representing a wide range of ecological types. Germination in forest gaps of different size was tested for 11 species. 2 Percentage germination was reduced in the dark only for three small-seeded species that are common in forest soil seed banks: Musanga cecropioides, Nauclea diderrichii and Milicia excelsa. Percentage germination of the other 16 species, including four widely regarded as ‘pioneers’, was unaffected. 3 Effects of different irradiances in shadehouses, where the seeds were watered, were significant for some species, but there was no consistent pattern. Irradiance effects in forest gaps, where the seeds received only natural wet season rainfall, were more widespread and substantial, and were most commonly shown as a depression of percentage germination at high irradiance. 4 Effects of light quality (neutral vs. green shade; red : far-red = 0.43) were insignificant at 5% irradiance in shadehouses for all species except Nauclea diderrichii. In growth chamber experiments, the low energy response was only evident at 1.0 µmol m–2 s–1 (< 1% of unshaded forest irradiance) in Musanga and Nauclea. 5 The speed of germination was affected by irradiance in many species, but the effect was small compared with differences between species, in which time to complete germination varied between 3 weeks and over 6 months. 6 Seeds of Ceiba pentandra and Pericopsis elata planted in deep forest shade (2% irradiance) and in a small gap (30% irradiance) germinated well in both sites, showed exponential biomass growth in the gap but a linear decline in mean seedling biomass and subsequent death in deep shade. 7 Light-mediated germination is relatively rare among these forest trees, even among pioneers, so that the working definition of a pioneer should be seen to depend more on a species’ ability to survive in forest shade. The effects of canopy opening on seed germination are small except in the largest openings, which severely depress germination in a number of species, including some species with strongly light-demanding seedlings.

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