Seeds of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and mung bean (Vigna radiata (L.) Wilczek), with orthodox seed storage behaviour, were imbibed for between 8 h and 96 h at 15-degrees-C and 25-degrees-C, respectively, while barley seeds were also maintained in moist aerated storage at 15-degrees-C for 14 d. These seeds and seedlings, together with controls, were then dried to various moisture contents between 3% and 16% (wet basis) and hermetically stored for six months at -20-degrees-C, 0-degrees-C or 15-degrees-C. In both species,. neither desiccation nor subsequent hermetic storage of the control lots resulted in loss in viability. The results for barley seeds imbibed for 24 h were similar to the control, but desiccation sensitivity increased progressively with duration of imbibition beyond 24 h in barley or 8 h in mung bean: these treatments also reduced the longevity of the surviving seeds in air-dry storage. Loss in viability in barley imbibed for 48 h was most rapid at the two extreme seed storage moisture contents of 3.6% and 14.3%, and in both these cases was more rapid at 15-degrees-C than at cooler temperatures. Similarly, for mung bean imbibed for 8 h, loss in viability was most rapid at the lowest (4.3%) moisture content, but in this case it was more rapid at -20-degrees-C than at warmer temperatures. Thus, these results for the storage of previously imbibed orthodox seeds conform with the main features of intermediate seed storage behaviour.