The Journal of General Physiology, Vol 9, 805-809,
Copyright © 1926 by The Rockefeller University Press
EFFECT OF HIGH PRESSURE ON GERMINATION OF SEEDS (MEDICAGO SATIVA AND MELILOTUS ALBA)
P. A. Davies 1
1 From the Laboratory of General Physiology, Harvard University, Cambridge.
An increase in percentage germination is obtained with seeds of Medicago sativa exposed for 1 to 10 minutes at 2000 atmospheres hydraulic pressure at 20°C., dried, and germinated after 30 days; and from seeds of Melilotus alba under the same conditions of pressure, when exposed for 5 to 30 minutes, dried, and germinated 30 days later. Exposures to 500 atmospheres pressure was less advantageous for germination; the vitality of seeds normally germinating was more rapidly destroyed than the hard impermeable seeds rendered permeable by the pressure treatment. At 0°C., it required approximately 2
times the exposure to 2000 atmospheres for seeds of Medicago sativa, and approximately 5 times the exposure for seeds of Melilotus alba, as it did at 20°C.
Accepted on April 15, 1926