EN
Dormancy of scarified seeds of Stylosanthes humilis was broken by acidic Al³⁺ and Fe³⁺ solutions. Fe⁺³-stimulated seeds exhibited a high activity of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate (ACC) oxidase and produced great amounts of ethylene, which showed correlated with the germination process. In addition, specific inhibitors of ethylene biosynthesis and action largely depressed the Fe³⁺-stimulated germination, leading to the conclusion that the ion broke dormancy by triggering ethylene production by the seeds. By contrast, inhibitors of ethylene biosynthesis and action did not impair germination of Al³⁺-stimulated dormant seeds. Moreover, ethylene production and activity of ACC oxidase of Al³⁺-treated seeds was substantially decreased by inhibitors of ethylene biosynthesis, but germination kept large. Together these data suggest that ethylene biosynthesis was not required in the chain of events triggered by Al³⁺ leading to dormancy breakage. Methyl viologen (MV), a reactive oxygen species-generating compound, broke dormancy of seeds to the same extent as Al³⁺ did. Germination of both Al³⁺- and MV-stimulated dormant seeds was inhibited by sodium selenate, an antioxidant compound; selenate, however had no effect on germination of Fe³⁺-stimulated seeds. Together these data indicate that the mechanisms underlying the germination of Al³⁺- and Fe³⁺-treated seeds are not the same.