Fagan, Kate C.; Pywell, Richard F.
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6431-9959; Bullock, James M.
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0529-4020; Marrs, Rob H..
2010
The seed banks of English lowland calcareous grasslands along a restoration chronosequence.
Plant Ecology, 208 (2).
199-211.
10.1007/s11258-009-9698-9
Abstract
We investigated whether the seed banks of
ex-arable lowland calcareous grasslands underwent
restoration similar to that of the above-ground restoration,
andwhether this was influenced by seed-sowing or
environmental conditions. We compared 40 sites,
where some form of restoration work had been
implemented between 2 and 60 years previously, with
40 paired reference sites of good quality calcareous
grassland with no history of ploughing or agricultural
improvement. We analysed differences between sites
and between above- and below-ground vegetation
using both a multivariate approach and proportions of
selected plant attributes. Seed banks of reference sites
were more characteristic of late successional
communities, with attributes such as stress tolerance,
perenniality and a reliance on fruit as the germinule
form more abundant than in restoration sites. In
restoration sites, these tended to decrease with restoration
site isolation and increase with restoration site age
and where soil nutrient conditions were more similar to
reference sites (i.e. with relatively low phosphorus and
high nitrogen). Seed bank communities of all sites
differed considerably from above-ground communities,
however, and no overall significant responses to
site age, isolation or soil nutrients were detected by
multivariate analyses of similarity of species between
pairs of sites. Responses to different seeding methods
were also barely detectable. While there is some
indication from the plant attribute data that the regeneration
potential contained in the seed banks of restored
sites increasingly resembles that of references sites over
time, even seed banks of good quality calcareous
grassland are dominated by ruderal species. It is likely,
therefore, that permanent seed banks do not facilitate
the restoration of ex-arable grasslands.
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