Seeds: The Ecology of Regeneration in Plant Communities 2000
DOI: 10.1079/9780851994321.0215
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The functional ecology of soil seed banks.

Abstract: This chapter discusses seed persistence in the soil.

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Cited by 253 publications
(247 citation statements)
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“…Seed bank dynamics-Unlike several annual plant species (Fenner, 1985;Thompson, 1992), Floerkea does not maintain a long-term, persistent soil seed bank. After seedling emergence in April and May, few seeds are still present on/in the soil.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Seed bank dynamics-Unlike several annual plant species (Fenner, 1985;Thompson, 1992), Floerkea does not maintain a long-term, persistent soil seed bank. After seedling emergence in April and May, few seeds are still present on/in the soil.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…many decades or centuries, are very rare, and do not always seem to be reliable (Bakker et al, 1996b). More specifically, most typical shade-tolerant forest plant species, like the climax tropical tree species in the dry Afromontane forests of Ethiopia, do not accumulate persistent seed banks (Thompson, 1992; Demel Teketay and Granström, 1995; Demel Teketay, 1996). Even those species with persistent soil seed banks do not survive a short period of other land uses after conversion (Bossuyt et al, 1999).…”
Section: Soil Seed Banks In Degraded Lands and Agroecosystemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For V. spinulosa investment in sexual reproduction may therefore be vital under circumstances of unpredictable environmental conditions for long-distance dispersal, while the species relies more heavily on local dispersal of asexual clones through tuber survival (Santamaria, 2002). The restricted sample size gave equivocal results on the degree of investment in sexual reproduction because of our inability to predict the sex of plants, as measured by the dry weight of mature fruit production, but the indications are that investment in sexual reproduction could be affected by shortening the growth season, as found in V. natans (Thompson, 1992). The results of these two experiments together suggest that reductions in the period of inundation in a largely annual species (V. natans) reduce investment in sexual reproduction and in a perennial species (V. spinulosa) in over-wintering tuber mass, implying that especially earlier desiccation of the Yangtze River wetlands in autumn could affect recruitment of both species of submerged macrophyte, despite their differing reproduction strategies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 71%