Soil seed bank community dynamics in seasonally moist lowland tropical forest, Panama
- 1 September 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Tropical Ecology
- Vol. 13 (5) , 659-680
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0266467400010853
Abstract
Seasonal changes in the densities of dormant seeds in the soil around eight pioneer trees in the 50-ha Forest Dynamics Plot, on Barro Colorado Island, Panamá were studied, and how seed dispersal and seed dormancy influenced patterns of seed abundance and distribution were examined. Twenty-four, 3-cm-deep soil samples were collected on 30 m transects radiating out from each of the trees in each of four time-intervals through the year, and four 21-cm-deep samples were collected beneath the focal tree crowns. In the surface 0–3 cm of soil, germinable seed densities of all species combined declined from a peak of 1090 seeds m−2in the mid-wet season in August, to 330 seeds m−2by the end of the wet season in November. In contrast, at soil depths >3 cm, there was little variation in soil seed bank density through the year. Some variation in soil seed bank density for individual species could be accounted for by distance to reproductive conspecifics. Among species, abundance in the soil was negatively correlated with seed size. Seed persistence varied greatly among species at this site; after 1 y of burial in mesh bags, seed germinability of four species was near zero, while four other species showed no consistent decline in seed germinability after >2 y of burial. For at least one species,Trema micrantha, prolonged seed dormancy was also possible under natural conditions. Twenty-five percent ofTremaseeds extracted from the soil at a site occupied by an isolatedTrematree that died between 1982 and 1985 were still germinable in 1994.Keywords
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