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ABSTRACT:

Implications of seed banking for recruitment of southern Appalachian woody species

Journal Article

Hille Ris Lambers J; Clark J; Lavine M

2005

Ecology

86

85-95

Seed dormancy is assumed to be unimportant for population dynamics of temperate woody species because seeds occur at low densities and are short lived in forest soils. However low soil seed densities may result from low seed production and even modest seed longevity can buffer against fluctuating seed production potentially limiting density-dependent mortality and ensuring that seeds are available for germination when recruitment success is likely. To investigate whether seed banking affects woody seedling dynamics in the southern Appalachians we monitored seed rain seed bank and seedling densities to (1) determine the prevalence of seed banking among southern Appalachian woody species (2) quantify annual seed mortality rates for three seed-banking species using a Bayesian statistical approach and (3) assess whether or not the ability toseed bank affects recruitment rates. We found that the seeds of eight woody taxa (Acer rubrum Betula spp. Liriodendron talipifera Nyssa sylvatica Robinia pseudoacacia Rubus spp. Sassafras albidum and Vitis sp.) remain viable in the soil for more than one year. Seeds of six taxa (Amelanchier spp. Acer pennsylvanicum Carya spp. Quercus prinus Quercus rubra and Tsuga canadensis) were never found in the soil seed bank despite high seed production and germination. For three species a substantial proportion of seeds available for germination came from dispersal events two or more years in the past (Acer rubrum 12-37% Betula spp. 59-73% Liriodendron tulipifera 40-76%) even though annual seed mortality was high (Acer rubrum 70-98% Betula spp. 21-81% Liriodendron tulipifera 12-59%). In years when no seeds fall in local microsites (approximately one in five years) seed banks are the only source of seedling recruitment for these species. Comparing our results to those of previous studies led to valuable insights: first that seeds of Acer rubrum and Betula spp. suffer high mortality while being incorporated into the seed bank; and second that seed decay varies greatly over relatively small spatial scales (i.e. within a watershed). Taken together these results demonstrate that seed banking may play a critical role during woody seedling recruitment in temperate forests.

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