Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of contributors
- 1 Factors influencing the germination and storage characteristics of orchid pollen
- 2 Effect of temperature and moisture content on the viability of Cattleya aurantiaca seed
- 3 Asymbiotic germination of epiphytic and terrestrial orchids
- 4 Germination and mycorrhizal fungus compatibility in European orchids
- 5 Host–fungus relationships in orchid mycorrhizal systems
- 6 The effects of the composition of the atmosphere on the growth of seedlings of Cattleya aurantiaca
- 7 Orchid propagation by tissue culture techniques – past, present and future
- 8 Population biology and conservation of Ophrys sphegodes
- 9 Predicting population trends in Ophrys sphegodes Mill.
- 10 Predicting the probability of the bee orchid (Ophrys apifera) flowering or remaining vegetative from the size and number of leaves
- 11 British orchids in their European context
- 12 The Nature Conservancy Council and orchid conservation
- 13 A private conservation project in the coastal rainforest in Brazil: the first ten years
- 14 The role of the living orchid collection at Kew in conservation
- 15 Import and export of orchids and the law
- Index
2 - Effect of temperature and moisture content on the viability of Cattleya aurantiaca seed
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of contributors
- 1 Factors influencing the germination and storage characteristics of orchid pollen
- 2 Effect of temperature and moisture content on the viability of Cattleya aurantiaca seed
- 3 Asymbiotic germination of epiphytic and terrestrial orchids
- 4 Germination and mycorrhizal fungus compatibility in European orchids
- 5 Host–fungus relationships in orchid mycorrhizal systems
- 6 The effects of the composition of the atmosphere on the growth of seedlings of Cattleya aurantiaca
- 7 Orchid propagation by tissue culture techniques – past, present and future
- 8 Population biology and conservation of Ophrys sphegodes
- 9 Predicting population trends in Ophrys sphegodes Mill.
- 10 Predicting the probability of the bee orchid (Ophrys apifera) flowering or remaining vegetative from the size and number of leaves
- 11 British orchids in their European context
- 12 The Nature Conservancy Council and orchid conservation
- 13 A private conservation project in the coastal rainforest in Brazil: the first ten years
- 14 The role of the living orchid collection at Kew in conservation
- 15 Import and export of orchids and the law
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Although epiphytic orchids have been grown routinely from seed for more than sixty years using the asymbiotic method developed by Knudson (1922), relatively little interest has been attached to techniques for the storage of such seed. This is surprising, especially in view of the rapid loss of many orchid habitats, and in particular the loss of tropical moist forest, with the imminent threat of extinction of a large number of orchid species in the wild (Myers 1979, 1980; Koopowitz & Kaye 1983; Hagsater & Stewart 1986; Koopowitz 1986; Stewart 1986). Knudson (1934) indicated the desirability of storing seed to insure against either failure to germinate or the accidental loss of seedlings. The development of such techniques would also allow an assessment of the commercial merits and potential of a particular cross while still retaining a proportion of the seed.
The cryopreservation of seed shows considerable potential. Thus seeds of Encyclia vitellinum have been stored at a temperature of –40°C for 35 days without loss of viability (Koopowitz & Ward 1984). Svihla & Osterman (1943) reported that Cattleya hybrid seed survived freezing at –78°C, and Ito (1965) successfully stored seeds of Dendrobium nobile and Cattleya hybrids for periods of up to 465 days at –79°C. Pritchard (1984; 1985) reported that seeds of a number of terrestrial and epiphytic species with seed moisture contents below 14% were not damaged by storage in liquid nitrogen (–196°C).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Modern Methods in Orchid Conservation , pp. 17 - 30Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989
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