Journal of Biological Research - Thessaloniki (Jun 2023)

GIS-facilitated seed germination of six local endemic plants of Crete (Greece) and multifaceted evaluation in three economic sectors

  • Stefanos Hatzilazarou,
  • Ioannis Anestis,
  • Elias Pipinis,
  • Stefanos Kostas,
  • Manolis Avramakis,
  • Vasileios Greveniotis,
  • Eleftherios Dariotis,
  • Georgios Tsoktrouridis,
  • Nikos Krigas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.26262/jbrt.v30i0.9019
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 0

Abstract

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In the context of conservation and sustainable exploitation of neglected and underutilized plant genetic resources (NUPs), this study focused on six Cretan local endemic plants i.e., three monocots (Allium bourgeaui subsp. creticum, Allium dilatatum, Muscari spreitzenhoferi) and three dicots (Alyssum baldaccii, Campanula saxatilis subsp. saxatilis, Silene antri-jovis). We aimed at determining the ecological conditions needed for these plants to thrive based on their natural preferences which define their germination requirements and allow the development of species-specific propagation protocols. Secondly, we overviewed the potential of the targeted species for sustainable exploitation in three economic sectors (ornamental-horticultural, medicinal-cosmetic, agro-alimentary). The ecological profiles of each species were constructed using Geographic Information System and climate data from WorldClim. Four temperatures were examined in seed germination trials (10, 15, 20, 25oC) and germination percentages (GP) were calculated. Seed germination of monocots showed preference in more cold temperatures (70.0%, 40.0% and 71.25% at 10oC for A. bourgeaui subsp. creticum, A. dilatatum and M. spreitzenhoferi, respectively) while in two of the dicots it exhibited a wider temperature range (83.75-86.25% at 10, 15, 20oC for A. baldaccii and 90-98.75% at all temperatures tested for S. antri-jovis) while in C. saxatilis subsp. saxatilis at lower temperatures (85% and 71.25% at 10 and 15oC, respectively). The assessed taxa showed interesting value mainly for the ornamental and agro-alimentary sectors, and their potential is discussed herein in detail (first-time for A. baldaccii). Exploiting all the above results, we re-evaluated the feasibility and readiness timescale for sustainable exploitation in three economic sectors for the targeted NUPs and their upgraded assessments are first-time presented herein in detail.

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