Seed banks as a neglected area of biogeographic research: a review of literature and sampling techniques
- 1 September 1993
- journal article
- review article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Progress in Physical Geography: Earth and Environment
- Vol. 17 (3) , 329-347
- https://doi.org/10.1177/030913339301700303
Abstract
The article highlights a comparatively neglected area of biogeographical research - seed banks and the distribution of seeds in the soil. The article reviews some of the relevant literature on seed banks and the methods for their study. Attention is focused on aspects of seed banks of particular relevance to biogeographers, with detailed examples drawn from seed bank studies in both temperate and tropical environments. In the review of the seed bank literature, the topics covered include the seed banks of successional communities and the size of seed banks in different vegetation types. The species composition of seed banks in different plant communities is discussed, particularly the degree of correlation between the species composition of seed banks and associated ground flora. The relationships between seed persistence, depth of burial in the soil and soil properties, such as moisture and pH, are explored. Seed bank heterogeneity is examined and a number of studies which have attempted to describe and measure the spatial variability of seed banks are summarized. Ways of classifying seed banks in terms of seed bank strategies are explained. The role of seed banks in conservation is discussed, for example in restoration projects, where preferred species have been lost from the vegetation but survive in the seed bank. The relevance of seed banks for the conservation of rare species and in landscape management is considered. Lastly, the contribution of seed banks to the recovery of vegetation following disturbance in various plant communities is discussed. In the review of seed bank sampling techniques, the subjects considered include methods of sample collection, the sampling intensity required for reliable estimates of seed density, a consideration of the relative merits of random and systematic sample distribution, as well as the importance of the timing of sampling. Various methods for the estimation of seed numbers in samples are appraised; these either involve extraction of seeds from the soil, followed by seed identification or enumeration by germination and seedling identification. Problems of analysing seed bank data are considered and several useful techniques for data analysis are suggested. Finally, the article draws attention to areas of future seed bank research for biogeographers and plant ecologists.Keywords
This publication has 100 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Comparison of Methods for Estimating Seed Numbers in the SoilJournal of Ecology, 1990
- Spatial Pattern Analysis of Seed Banks: An Improved Method and Optimized SamplingEcology, 1988
- Small-Scale Heterogeneity in the Seed Bank of An Acidic GrasslandJournal of Ecology, 1986
- Buried viable seed in a ponderosa pine communityCanadian Journal of Botany, 1984
- Seed banks in five boreal forest stands originating between 1810 and 1963Canadian Journal of Botany, 1982
- Seasonal Variation in the Seed Banks of Herbaceous Species in Ten Contrasting HabitatsJournal of Ecology, 1979
- Buried Viable Seed in Successional Field and Forest Stands, Harvard Forest, MassachusettsBulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 1968
- Buried, viable seeds in two California bunchgrass sites and their bearing on the definition of a floraPlant Ecology, 1966
- An Ordination of the Upland Forest Communities of Southern WisconsinEcological Monographs, 1957
- Buried Viable Seeds in a Successional Series of Old Field and Forest SoilsBulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 1940