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Seed Priming Beyond Stress Adaptation: Broadening the Agronomic Horizon

Mujo Hasanović, Adaleta Durmić-Pašić, Erna Karalija

2025Agronomy16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Seed priming, traditionally viewed as a method for enhancing crop resilience to abiotic stress, has evolved into a multifaceted agronomic strategy. This review synthesizes the current findings demonstrating that priming influences plant development, metabolic regulation, and yield enhancement even under optimal conditions. By covering a wide range of crops, including cereals (e.g., wheat, maize, rice, and barley) as well as vegetables and horticultural species (e.g., tomato, carrot, spinach, and lettuce), we highlight the broad applicability of priming across agricultural systems. The underlying mechanisms include hormonal modulation, altered source–sink dynamics, accelerated phenology, and epigenetic memory. Various priming techniques are discussed, including hydropriming, osmopriming, biopriming, chemopriming, and nanopriming, with attention to their physiological and molecular effects. Special focus is given to the role of seed priming in advancing climate-smart and precision agriculture. By shifting the narrative from stress mitigation to holistic crop performance optimization, seed priming emerges as a key tool for sustainable agriculture in the face of global challenges.

Topics & Concepts

Priming (agriculture)Abiotic componentBiologyPsychological resilienceAgricultureAbiotic stressCropYield (engineering)Sustainable agricultureBiotechnologyCrop yieldAgronomyAgricultural engineeringCash cropRange (aeronautics)Perspective (graphical)PerceptionResilience (materials science)Climate changeNew horizonsSustainabilityAgroforestryFood securityStress (linguistics)Agricultural productivitySeed Germination and PhysiologyPlant tissue culture and regenerationPlant Genetic and Mutation Studies
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