Seedling production of Bertholletia excelsa in response to seed origin and position inside fruit

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5039/agraria.v14i3a5662

Keywords:

Brazil nut, quality indexes, seed germination, tree seedling production

Abstract

Bertholletia excelsa, known as Brazil nut, is an economically valuable tree species from the Amazon. Seeds of B. excelsa figure as one of the most important non-timber forest products in Bolivia, Brazil, and Peru. These seeds, however, have physiological dormancy, which makes the germination slow, irregular, and often in low percentages. Such biological feature represents a bottleneck to the production of high quality seedlings. In an experiment performed in Puerto Maldonado, Peru, ten fruits were collected per individual in 15 trees of B. excelsa in each of the two areas: an experimental planting and a native forest. Several variables regarding fruit biometry, germination, initial growth, and seedlings quality indexes were measured in order to compare B. excelsa seedlings produced by seeds from two areas and also regarding the lower and upper seed position inside the fruit. Both fruit length and diameter presented low variation and most of the fruits had flat shape. Seeds were more abundant in the lower position (mean = 12.9 ± 2.2) than in the upper position (mean = 6.5 ± 2.1) inside the fruit. Considering the total number of seeds per fruit, the means were 19.4 ± 3.2 and 17.5 ± 3.7 for planted and native forest, respectively. Complete germination did not differ between areas (F1, 56 = 1.945, p = 0.169). Seedlings produced with seeds from planted and from the lower position inside the fruit presented higher quality indexes.

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Published

2019-09-30

How to Cite

Luiz Fernandes Silva Dionisio, Edgar Cusi Auca, Gustavo Schwartz, Ricardo Manuel Bardales-Lozano, Jimmy Jeanine Miró Agurto, & Ronald Corvera-Gomringer. (2019). Seedling production of Bertholletia excelsa in response to seed origin and position inside fruit. Brazilian Journal of Agricultural Sciences, 14(3), 1-9. https://doi.org/10.5039/agraria.v14i3a5662

Issue

Section

Forest Sciences