2. What is seed?
In broad sense
Seed is a material which is used for planting or regeneration purpose.
scientifically
Seed is a fertilized matured ovule together covered with seed coat is called
seed or it is a propagating material.
Technological point of view
Seed is a fertilized ripened ovule consisting of three main parts namely
seed coat, endosperm and embryo, which in due course gives rise to a
new plant.
It also refers to
Propagating
materials
of
healthy
seedlings, tuber, bulbs, rhizome, roots, cuttings, setts, all types of grafts
and vegetatively propagating materials used for production purpose.
3. Basic Parts of a Seed
1.
2.
3.
Embryo
Endosperm
Seed Coat
The embryo is the baby plant.
It consists of plumule, radicle and cotyledon. The embryo is the
young multicellular organism before it emerges from the seed.
The endosperm is a source of stored food, consisting primarily of
starches. It is the structure that has been formed to provide
nutrition for embryo in germination.
The seed coat consists of one or more protective layers that encase
the seed. The seed coat is tough and waterproof. It covers and
protects the embryo and the food supply
4.
5. Germination
The emergence and development from the seed embryo of those structures
which seed indicate the ability to produce a normal plant.
Conditions Necessary for Germination
Water
Air
Temperature
Light
Modes of Germination
Seeds present two modes of germination based on the behavior of the
cotyledons or storage organs.
Epigeal Germination
Hypogeal Germination
6. Types of Seeds
MONOCOTS
Embryo with single cotyledon
Usually endospermic
Germination usually hypogeal (Except in onion)
Flower parts in multiples of three
Major leaf veins parallel
Stem vacular bundles scattered
Roots are adventitious
Secondary growth absent
DICOTS
Embryo with two cotyledons
Usually non-endospermic (Except Castor seed)
Germination usually epigeal (except in pea, gram)
Flower parts in multiples of four or five
Major leaf veins reticulated
Stem vascular bundles in a ring
Roots develop from radicle
Secondary growth often present
Grains, (wheat, corn, rice, millet) sugarcane, banana, ginger, Legumes (pea, beans, lentils, peanuts) mint, lettuce, tomato,
onions, grass
oak, tree, etc.
7. 1.Epigeal Germination
The cotyledons come out above the soil surface and generally turn green
and act as first foliage leaves. This type of germination present in
groundnut, bean, cotton, sunflower and cotton seeds.
9. Classes of Seed
1.
2.
3.
4.
Breeder’s Seed
Pre-basic seed
Basic Seed
Certified Seed
1. Breeder’s seed
Progeny of nucleus seed
Directly supervised by a breeder
Genetically and physical pure
Not available for commercial distribution
2. Pre-basic seed
Progeny of breeder’s seed
Handled so as to maintain specific genetic purity and identity
Produced in the defined regions
Must be approved by the Federal Seed Certification Department.
White label with diagonal violet line
10. Classes of Seed
3. Basic seed
• Progeny of pre-basic seed
• Produced on extension farms ,
research farms and by progressive farmers
• Must be certified by the FSCD
• white label
4. Certified seed
• Progeny of basic seed
• Produced by registered growers
of seed producing agencies
• Quality is controlled by the FSCD
• Certified Seed-I has Blue label and
certified seed-II (improved seed) has red label
11. Information on the Label
a. Species (botanical name)
b. Cultivar name
c. Category
d. Reference number
e. Date of issue of certificate
ANALYSIS TAG
A-1 Seed Co.
Location, USA
Variety & Kind
Lot No.
Pure seed
Inert matter
Other crop seed
Weed seed
Noxious weeds
Germination
Hard seed
Date tested
Net weight
Vernal Alfalfa
307-98
98.90%
01.05%
00.00%
00.05%
00.00%
90.00%
05.00%
Jan. 2001
60 lbs.
12. Seed Quality
Seed quality is the sum of all properties contributing to seed
performance. The quality of seed can decide whether a farmer’s crop
will be good, bad or indifferent. Seed quality is determined by the
following characteristics:
1. Physical Attributes
2. Physiological Attributes
3. Genetic Attributes
4. Storability
13. Seed Quality
1. Physical Attributes
A minimum of damaged seed
A minimal amount of weed seed or inert matter
A minimum of diseased seed
Near uniform seed size
2. Physiological Attributes
Germination Percentage or Viability
The germination percentage or viability is an indicator of the
seed’s ability to emerge from the soil to produce a plant in the
field under normal conditions
Seed Vigour
Seed vigour is the capacity of seed to emerge from the soil and
survive under potentially stressful field conditions and to grow
rapidly under favourable conditions
14. Seed Quality
3. Genetic Attributes
Seed of the same variety
Adapted to the local conditions
Pest and disease tolerance
High yielding ability
4. Storability
Moisture content
Temperature of the environment
Seed treatment