Zeedman
Garden Master
Seed age certainly is a factor. My seed saving rotation is based upon growing out new seed every 5 years, and circumstances often delay that schedule (a lot of 2012-2013 seed this year). While some of that older seed is still surprisingly viable, deformities and failure to emerge intact (such as broken cotyledons and missing sprouts) are common.The funny thing is about those seedheads/cotyledons or lack thereof, is some of the beans I started in pots had them too. You'd think starting mix would eliminate the possibility of those issues, minus perhaps the seeds being planted too deep, which I may have done here or there by accident. It wasn't that many compared to the total planted, but many more than I usually see. I wonder if older seed is more prone to this?
There is a particular failure I often see in older beans - the inability to sense gravity, and to emerge upright. The sprout will literally coil underground, seeking light. Old soybeans are very prone to this, even when started in pots with sterile medium. I almost never see this in newer seed. I found the need this year to replenish 2018 seed for the soybean Sakamotowase, due to low stock... it was refreshing to see a row with strong, even germination. If I ever get caught up on my grow outs, I hope that will become the norm.