Assessing the quality of Jatropha curcas l. seeds as planting material in Sarawak

A study was conducted to evaluate the quality ofJatropha clircas seeds collected from two different accessions in Sarawak. A significant seed source variation was observed in seed morphology (colour, size and weight), seed viability, germination, moisture content, seeds storability, priming treat...

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Main Author: Sivasangari, A/P Jagatheeswaran
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Universiti Malaysia Sarawak, (UNIMAS) 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/13554/
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/13554/1/Sivasangari.pdf
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author Sivasangari, A/P Jagatheeswaran
author_facet Sivasangari, A/P Jagatheeswaran
author_sort Sivasangari, A/P Jagatheeswaran
building UNIMAS Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description A study was conducted to evaluate the quality ofJatropha clircas seeds collected from two different accessions in Sarawak. A significant seed source variation was observed in seed morphology (colour, size and weight), seed viability, germination, moisture content, seeds storability, priming treatments, accelerated ageing, seed oil percentage and early growth performance of seed lin;) The seeds from Bintulu, Samarahan and control were dehydrated in silica gel for 0, 24, 48, 72, 96 and 120 hours then stored in six different environments for the basic seed storage; ambient room (28-30 0q, air-conditioned room (22-24 0q, refrigerator (3-5 0q, incubator (35- 40 0q, freezer (0-4 0q and liquid nitrogen (-196 0q for 4 months. Three types 0 f priming treatment used were the hydro priming, 0 smopriming and thermopriming. The average fresh weights of 10 seeds were 8.02 g, 5.94 g 7.55 g respectively, for Bintulu, Samarahan and Control seeds. Oil content was 36.75% in Bintulu, 30.37% in Samarahan and 35.49% in Control. Preliminary evaluation conducted indicated that moisture content was 18.92% for Bintulu, for 13.91% Samarahan and 17.07% for Control. Germination was 74.88, 50.10, and 70.5% for Bintulu, Samarahan and Control respectively. Viability for Bintulu, Samarahan and Control seeds were 80, 60 and 82% respectively. The dehydrated seeds at 48 hours were found successful after storing at all types of environment. The highest germination and viability percentage was obtained with seeds stored in liquid nitrogen. Seeds of J. clircas in liquid nitrogen can be stored for 163, 159, 177 days for Bintulu, Samarahan and control seeds respectively. The germination and viability percentages of J. curcas seeds from Bintulu were highest when the seeds were thermoprimed in water at 40°C as compared to other priming treatments. At 24 hour ageing the germination percentage was the highest for both accessions. Photosynthesis rates (A), stomatal conductance (gs), transpiration (E), and Chlorophyll content in Bintulu plant higher than its water stress counterpart. The seeds from Bintulu responded better germination, viability, moisture content and also with greater seed weight and size as compared to the seeds from other accessions. Overall, the seeds from Bintulu are better in its seed quality, morphologically and physiologically as compared to other accessions. The positive effect has been very favorable in terms of its quality due to the plant's potential to produce biofuel.
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format Thesis
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institution Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
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language English
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publishDate 2012
publisher Universiti Malaysia Sarawak, (UNIMAS)
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spelling unimas-135542023-08-04T03:21:29Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/13554/ Assessing the quality of Jatropha curcas l. seeds as planting material in Sarawak Sivasangari, A/P Jagatheeswaran SB Plant culture A study was conducted to evaluate the quality ofJatropha clircas seeds collected from two different accessions in Sarawak. A significant seed source variation was observed in seed morphology (colour, size and weight), seed viability, germination, moisture content, seeds storability, priming treatments, accelerated ageing, seed oil percentage and early growth performance of seed lin;) The seeds from Bintulu, Samarahan and control were dehydrated in silica gel for 0, 24, 48, 72, 96 and 120 hours then stored in six different environments for the basic seed storage; ambient room (28-30 0q, air-conditioned room (22-24 0q, refrigerator (3-5 0q, incubator (35- 40 0q, freezer (0-4 0q and liquid nitrogen (-196 0q for 4 months. Three types 0 f priming treatment used were the hydro priming, 0 smopriming and thermopriming. The average fresh weights of 10 seeds were 8.02 g, 5.94 g 7.55 g respectively, for Bintulu, Samarahan and Control seeds. Oil content was 36.75% in Bintulu, 30.37% in Samarahan and 35.49% in Control. Preliminary evaluation conducted indicated that moisture content was 18.92% for Bintulu, for 13.91% Samarahan and 17.07% for Control. Germination was 74.88, 50.10, and 70.5% for Bintulu, Samarahan and Control respectively. Viability for Bintulu, Samarahan and Control seeds were 80, 60 and 82% respectively. The dehydrated seeds at 48 hours were found successful after storing at all types of environment. The highest germination and viability percentage was obtained with seeds stored in liquid nitrogen. Seeds of J. clircas in liquid nitrogen can be stored for 163, 159, 177 days for Bintulu, Samarahan and control seeds respectively. The germination and viability percentages of J. curcas seeds from Bintulu were highest when the seeds were thermoprimed in water at 40°C as compared to other priming treatments. At 24 hour ageing the germination percentage was the highest for both accessions. Photosynthesis rates (A), stomatal conductance (gs), transpiration (E), and Chlorophyll content in Bintulu plant higher than its water stress counterpart. The seeds from Bintulu responded better germination, viability, moisture content and also with greater seed weight and size as compared to the seeds from other accessions. Overall, the seeds from Bintulu are better in its seed quality, morphologically and physiologically as compared to other accessions. The positive effect has been very favorable in terms of its quality due to the plant's potential to produce biofuel. Universiti Malaysia Sarawak, (UNIMAS) 2012 Thesis NonPeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/13554/1/Sivasangari.pdf Sivasangari, A/P Jagatheeswaran (2012) Assessing the quality of Jatropha curcas l. seeds as planting material in Sarawak. Masters thesis, Universiti Malaysia Sarawak, (UNIMAS).
spellingShingle SB Plant culture
Sivasangari, A/P Jagatheeswaran
Assessing the quality of Jatropha curcas l. seeds as planting material in Sarawak
title Assessing the quality of Jatropha curcas l. seeds as planting material in Sarawak
title_full Assessing the quality of Jatropha curcas l. seeds as planting material in Sarawak
title_fullStr Assessing the quality of Jatropha curcas l. seeds as planting material in Sarawak
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the quality of Jatropha curcas l. seeds as planting material in Sarawak
title_short Assessing the quality of Jatropha curcas l. seeds as planting material in Sarawak
title_sort assessing the quality of jatropha curcas l. seeds as planting material in sarawak
topic SB Plant culture
url http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/13554/
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/13554/1/Sivasangari.pdf