more chlorine = less seed germination
it affects it by having non-toxic bleach inside of the water,therefore making it clean.
lol
The seed dosen't want to grow in hot water because it is burning the seed and it's roots to some extent
the general "rule of thumb" in horticulture for seed sowing - the seed should be covered to double depth the diameter of the seed - no more. Some seeds however, should not be covered for germination - these are normally very fine seed such as Begonia
The seed will need to respire aerobically (glucose + oxygen= energy + CO2 + Water) in order to release the energy needed to grow.
Basically more chlorine=less germination
Temperature has the greatest effect on seed germination.
Yes because of Lauren Hallas.
Chlorine is poison so the seed that would try to germinate in clorine would most likely die. The rate of growth slows or stops. Chlorine is not helpful to plants what so ever.
it affects it by having non-toxic bleach inside of the water,therefore making it clean.
germination begins when seed tissues absorb water.
when the water used in germination is sugary, it does not enter the seed
Depends entirely upon the seed and how much salt.
Seed germination requires the proper combination of oxygen, temperature, moisture and light. As the seed takes up water, it activates enzymes that direct the process of germination.
Enzymes play a large role in seed germination. The enzymes break down the materials that are stored in the seed.
Oxalic acid prevents seed growth by putting the seed into a stage of dormancy.....
For germination to occur a seed has to absorb water