6533b870fe1ef96bd12cfa05

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Relationship between the seed rain and the establishment of vegetation in two areas abandoned after peat harvesting

Veikko Salonen

subject

PeatGerminationVegetation successionEcologySeedlingPlant speciesfood and beveragesEcological successionSoil surfaceVegetationBiologybiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics

description

In this study the number and species composition of diaspores dispersing into two newly abandoned peat harvesting areas in Finland were investigated. In an area abandoned six years earlier a total of 2978 living seeds m−2, representing 18 species, was captured by using water-filled traps during two summers. In a one-year-old succession area the total number of living seeds m−2 was 2241, representing 16 plant species. The soil seed banks were found to be empty of viable seeds. In neither area there appeared to be any relation between number of dispersing seeds and of plant individuals of the same species in the pioneer vegetation. It is suggested that unfavourable conditions on the soil surface for seed germination and seedling growth of most dispersed species are majors factor in determining the structure of the established vegetation.

https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0587.1987.tb00755.x