SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIATION IN THE SEED BANK OF A SEMIARID GRASSLAND
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Botany
- Vol. 76 (1) , 53-58
- https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1537-2197.1989.tb11284.x
Abstract
The spatial and temporal variability in the seed bank of a semiarid grassland in Colorado was evaluated using soil cores. Spatial variability in the soil storage of germinable seeds was assessed by sampling two shortgrass plant communities on sites with the same climatic conditions but differing in soil texture. Differences between communities were largely the result of annual plant seeds. Eight sampling dates over two years were used to assess temporal variability, which was more important to the storage of germinable seeds than spatial variability. Differences in the numbers of seeds stored were found between the two sampling years, and seasonally within years. The number of seedlings that emerged from the samples ranged from 122–2,748/m2. A poor correspondence was found between the species composition of the plant communities and the storage of germinable seeds; however, the species composition of the seeds produced on the sites tended to have a high similarity with the seedlings that emerged. Most of the species had a transient rather than a persistent presence in the seed bank.Keywords
Funding Information
- National Science Foundation
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Effects of Disturbance Size and Frequency on a Shortgrass Plant CommunityEcology, 1988
- Moisture and Temperature Requirements for Adventitious Root Development in Blue Grama SeedlingsJournal of Range Management, 1978
- Temperature Effects on Adventitious Root Development in Blue Grama SeedlingsJournal of Range Management, 1977
- Phenological Pattern in the Shortgrass PrairieThe American Midland Naturalist, 1976
- Plant Succession of Old Fields in the Dust BowlThe Southwestern Naturalist, 1974
- Seedling Morphology and Seeding Failures with Blue GramaJournal of Range Management, 1971
- An Ordination of the Upland Forest Communities of Southern WisconsinEcological Monographs, 1957
- The Population of Buried Viable Seeds in Relation to Contrasting Pasture and Soil TypesJournal of Ecology, 1948
- Natural Revegetation of Abandoned Plowed Land in the Mixed Prairie Association of Northeastern ColoradoEcology, 1944
- Natural Succession of Vegetation on Abandoned Farm Lands in the Rosebud Soil Area of Western Nebraska1Agronomy Journal, 1939