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Seed

Quick definition

A dormant, viable plant embryo with food reserves and protective coating, capable of germinating into a new plant when conditions are right.

In plain terms

Seeds are plant embryos in dormancy—alive but not growing, waiting for the right conditions (moisture, temperature, light). A viable seed contains a living embryo and enough stored food to power initial growth. Once planted in proper conditions, seeds germinate, developing a root and shoot.

Why this matters

Understanding seed basics helps you start seeds successfully and understand seed dormancy, viability, and storage.

In practice

Examples

  • Tomato seed planted in warm (70°F), moist soil; germinates in 5-7 days.
  • Same seed in cool (60°F) soil; takes 2-3 weeks.
  • Stored seed in cool, dry conditions remains viable for years; same seed exposed to heat and moisture loses viability quickly.
  • Old seed from last year; viability may be reduced; test by germinating before relying on full quantity.

Practical applications

  • Start seeds at proper temperature for the crop.
  • Keep seed starting soil consistently moist (not waterlogged).
  • Provide light once sprouted (grow lights or sunny window).
  • Store unused seed in cool, dry, dark place to maintain viability.
  • Check seed packet for germination info and storage recommendations.

Connected terms