Sowing and Saving Seeds Year Round Andy Waltke, M.S. Creighton University Common Soil Seed Library Lecture Series Intro to Seeds People have been collecting, growing and saving seeds for thousands of years. Domesticated varieties of crops found in grocery stores today are massively different from the plants they were originally selected from. Thus, each time you grow a pack of seeds you are adding to the continuum of plant breeding that has been ongoing for thousands of years. Year Round Activity: Plant in spring and summer, and save dried seeds during fall and winter months 1
Angiosperm Life Cycle Seed grows plant Plant flowers Fertilization occurs (pollen to stigma) Fruit and seeds develop in female flower parts Ovules within the ovary Seeds dispersed to regrow again Through eating fruits, wind, etc. Flower Anatomy 2
Flower Types Monoecious: Perfect has male and female parts in same flower Example: Tomato Imperfect has male and female parts in different flowers but on same plant Example: Many squashes Dioecious different sexes of plants, one plant has only male flowers and another has only female flowers (kiwi, pawpaw, several palms, etc.) Ray vs Disk Florets in Asteraceae 3
Pollination Cross Pollinating: pollen to another flower By Wind: Grasses or Brassicas (beets, spinach) By Insect: Most vegetables and crops Self Pollinating: Happens before the flower opens (tomato) The critical step to achieve fertilization between pollen and receptive flower to ensure fruit production. Fruit Production From Fertilized Ovary 4
Open Pollinated vs Hybrid Seeds labeled as Open Pollinated simply mean that is occurred naturally without human intervention. OP plants will grow like their parents and are stable varieties Hybrid seeds are created through controlled crosses of different parent plants within the same species Creates a new combination of characteristics that will grow out in first generation Hybridization 5
Phenotypes Phenotype is the expressed form in which the plant grows. It could be tall or short or any other set of characters. These are varieties of the same set of genes expressed in different ways. These show examples of tolerance to conditions or pests, or fruit size, or any number of traits. It shows the influence of the growing environment and produces unique characteristics among the same species. Growing to Save Seed Limit insect cross pollination to breed true crops One cultivar per space if possible, and one member per genus is possible Separate them by at least 30 50 ft typically In one garden, you may grow several types of different plants and save seed from them all. Just not when five basil varieties are right next to one another for example 6
What veggies do not need pollinators? All leafy greens Brassicas: broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, etc. Below ground root veggies and tubers: carrots, parsnips, salsify, potatoes, horseradish Ground level root veggies: beets, turnips, rutabagas Most legumes including peas and beans Corn Many culinary herbs Celery Onions and leeks sweet potatoes, Isolation Nets These may be placed over plants or flowers to allow for airflow but limit insect access to the plant 7
Selection of Seeds Mass Selection plant an overabundance of one seed type, and select best individuals Rouging = removing inferior plants before flowering Positive Selection select for a certain trait and save seeds from that plant/fruit for next year For best flavor, fruit size, plant shape, fruit storage, color of plant or fruit, timing of flowering any number of characteristics Do not save seed from failing, unhappy, or plants that do not grow as well as they should those traits will be retained in their seeds! Crop Ancestors are Evidence of Selection Banana Tomato 8
Corn Ancestor Corn domestication occurred in modern day Mexico from teosinthe Selection for kernel size Selection for cob size Selection for plant size Etc. Crop Diversity in One Species Plants of Brassica oleraceae have been selected for different plant parts in the past to now have hundreds of varieties of 6 major crops! 9
Importance of Biodiversity Natural resilience! Each variety has a story and different capacities. Massive human element in seed varieties with the amount of knowledge and care that went into their preservation over the long term! In the face of disease and climate change, old heirloom varieties hold the genetic richness to find traits like disease resistance or plants that grow well in a challenged environment like drought or heat. Loss of Crop Varieties in 100 years 10
Tallgrass Prairie Estimates of 1 4% of this ecosystem exists Only remains where it was too rocky to plow Fertile soils versus shortgrass prairie Coveted by the plow of pioneers 11
Importance of Seed Saving To retain biodiverse and locally adapted crop varieties before they go extinct ( ecovars ) Returns autonomy to families and communities by allowing access to seeds for healthy foods Improves community relations and allows for social engagement Supports seed library and swap ventures so seeds produced by one may be accessed by many Its what we have always done as humans and becoming a lost skill! Sowing Seeds Start tomato/peppers 6 8 weeks before spring Sow seeds in garden after frosts pass for most plants, transplant tomato/peppers Sow seeds in late summer for beans, peas, cucurbits, etc. Sow seeds in fall for perennial flowers or quick root or leaf crops A year round affair. Buy seeds during winter! 12
Follow that with Seed Saving Collect dried flower heads through the summer and fall Collect fruit in height of flowering season for seed saving Process seeds from fruits first, and let dried seed pods dry for weeks to months and process in the winter months. 13
Harvesting Fruit/Seeds For fleshy fruits, you want to select fruit from the height of the flowering period, and select overly ripe or grown fruits. This ensures the seeds reach maturity. Pick tomatoes when a bit soft after they were a firm fruit. Let cucumbers or squash get large beyond what you would harvest in the garden so seeds reach full size. For flowers, cut off heads and let dry for many weeks Seed Saving from Wet Sources Remove or scrape seeds from fruit like in a tomato or watermelon. Rinse well with water and submerge for a few minutes. Any floating seeds are typically immature and not viable. For tomato, soak seeds in water for several days until it becomes rotten. Dump off the water and floating seeds/flesh. Then strain the seeds out and scape off the jelly covering. Let the seeds air dry several days. 14
Dry Seed Saving: How To Harvest seed pods and dry for many weeks keep out of excessive heat and humidity Thresh break it up the pods to free the seeds Sieve use mesh screens to filter out seeds Winnow let chaff and plant material blow away or separate from the seeds Seed Cleaning Thresh/Sieve Use a pillowcase or thick trash bags Beat seeds out of pods Rub them Use sticks Walk on them Then use screens or out seeds colander to sieve 15
Seed Screens Order from Strictly Medicinal Seeds, Inc. Previously known as Horizon herbs Set of 8 seed screens for cleaning Or make your own! Winnowing Seeds Use moving air to clean seeds Roll and fly rolling seeds in a box and blow air against the direction of roll Pour seeds from container to container in front of a fan 16
Storing Seeds Humidity and temperature are bad Keep in manila/paper envelopes vs plastic bags Keep in glass jars instead of plastic bag Best in fridge for long term storage Best to use seeds quickly, if have excess donate them to the seed library! Simple Germination Test Add a number of seeds to a wet paper towel in a plastic container Counted number, at least 10 but best if more Keep towel wet through the average number of days to germination for the plant Count seeds that germinated and that will give you the germination rate for that batch of seeds. 17
Seed Libraries: Legal Seed Exchanges LB544 in Nebraska passed in 2015 to exempt seed libraries from commercial seed laws. Only of its kind in the US and thanks to the hard work of Betsy Goodman of Common Soil Seed Library! Sept 2016 California passes AB 1810 Only Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Nebraska and now California have these protective laws. Common Soil Seed Library http://guides.omahalibrary.org/commonsoil Three locations in Omaha at the Benson, South Omaha, and Elkhorn branches. Bring in and donate excess seed you save Come in and check out packs to seed to increase the diversity of plants in your yard! 18
Svalbard Seed Vault Ease of Seed Saving Easy = beans, lettuce, peas, pepper, tomato Intermediate = corn, cucumber, melons, squashes, and radish Difficult = onions, brassicas and apiaceae (carrot family) Easy plants will self pollinate and need less isolation distance but also have easy to process seeds. From there more distance is needed to keep purity in seed lines or more work to process some seeds. 19
Checklist for Seed Saving Identify crops or varieties you are interested in Find organic, open pollinated seed Create a journal and make notes on attributes and relevant dates Record variety, planting date, flowering date, etc. Determine flower type and if need to hand pollinate or bag plant/flowers What are considerations for that plant to save seed Is the plant an annual, biennial, perennial or what is its life cycle? Good Seed Sources Seed Savers Exchange Baker Creek Seeds Johnny s Seed Strictly Medicinal Prairie Moon Seeds Etc 20
Common Soil Lecture Series October: Prepping for the Winter, Planting Perennial Seeds, and Fungi in the Garden November: : Medicinal Plants, Herbs for Teas, Natural Dyes and other Garden Plant Uses. Intro to Research Resources Then February 2017: Starting Seeds and Prepping the Garden Etc Online Resources Seed Library Social Network http://seedlibraries.org CropTrust http://www.croptrust.org Seed Savers Exchange http://www.seedsavers.org/learn Living Seed Library http://www.livingseedlibrary.net/seeds/seed saving/ Seed Alliance http://seedalliance.org/uploads/publications/seed_saving_guide.pdf Seed Library Map (200+ globally) http://www.seedlibrarymap.com/ 21