im always open to help and be helped!! i only tried to offer my opinion and i think what i said is right that by increasing humidity and keeping it for half a day in darkness it woul increase its survival chances!! as was said cotyledons dont need much light so by doing those two things and having a warm temp you try emulating the state it was in when it was in its shell!! and its shell was forcefully removed it didnt drop off!! u maybe grow so many plants u forget the value 1 has for some!! im not trying to be an ass or a know it all and i apoligise if i made u feel in such a way i just tried to help!! peace and love
thank you for replying.
the thing about seed shells is they're designed to be dropped before the seedling sprouts. if this doesn't happen, the shell and membrane become much tougher and harder, and nearly impossible for the seedling to break through. this is because we plant seeds so shallow, instead of under a blanket of leaves dropped the previous fall...
now, the inside of the seed is an embryo, and that embryo is white. it has nutrients stored to grow a tap root and do some geotropism and phototropism, but that's about it. so, once the stretch out starts, those cotyledons act as solar panels, catching any available light. this light is used to create the first actual chlorophyll. so, the leaves go from white to green. this is normal for almost any plant that is grown from seed, and can be demonstrated by removing just about any house plant from it's pot, and looking at the tissue below the soil line.
so, all in all, helping out is better than leaving alone. you stand a greater chance of losing the seedling to constriction/suffocation than you do injury from removing the husk.
i hope this helps! rep for replying!