Seed rain and seed persistence of Calamagrostis epigejos (l.) roth in extreme ecotoxicological conditions at an abandoned ore-washery sedimentation basin

Clonal plants are very often among the first species to establish during primary succession. They may rapidly capture available space due to efficient vegetative propagation, but the question arises whether they may also rely on seed bank or seed rain during expansion and recovery after a possible d...

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Main Authors: Dostál Petr, Kovář Pavel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2013-12-01
Series:Journal of Landscape Ecology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/v10285-012-0066-4
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spelling doaj-17822bf439d14a778e89aa30038389ce2021-09-06T19:41:53ZengSciendoJournal of Landscape Ecology1805-41962013-12-0162173310.2478/v10285-012-0066-4Seed rain and seed persistence of Calamagrostis epigejos (l.) roth in extreme ecotoxicological conditions at an abandoned ore-washery sedimentation basinDostál Petr0Kovář Pavel1Institute of Botany ASCR, Zámek 1, CZ-252 43 Průhonice, Czech RepublicDepartment of Botany, Faculty of Sciences, Charles University, Benátská 2, CZ-128 01 Praha 2, Czech RepublicClonal plants are very often among the first species to establish during primary succession. They may rapidly capture available space due to efficient vegetative propagation, but the question arises whether they may also rely on seed bank or seed rain during expansion and recovery after a possible disturbance. This question becomes increasingly important in extreme conditions of industrial deposit investigated in this study. We explored the two aforementioned seed sources in a clonal grass Calamagrostis epigejos within an ecotoxicologically stressed environment - abandoned tailings containment (former sedimentation basin) - from manganese-ore mining. Density of seeds found in seed rain was 617 seeds m-2, and in soil seed bank 220 seeds m-2, based on an autumn survey. Soil seed pool was almost depleted until the following spring as only 13 seeds m-2 were present. This pattern contrasted with the capacity of C. epigejos to build a persistent soil seed bank as shown by a burial experiment. Seed rain was thus identified to be the sole reliable seed source that may assist in recovery of this species after a possible disturbancehttps://doi.org/10.2478/v10285-012-0066-4clonal plantscalamagrostis epigejoshuman-made habitatsabandoned tailings containmentmanganese-ore-miningecotoxicological stressseed bankseed dispersaldisturbanceprimary succession of vegetation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dostál Petr
Kovář Pavel
spellingShingle Dostál Petr
Kovář Pavel
Seed rain and seed persistence of Calamagrostis epigejos (l.) roth in extreme ecotoxicological conditions at an abandoned ore-washery sedimentation basin
Journal of Landscape Ecology
clonal plants
calamagrostis epigejos
human-made habitats
abandoned tailings containment
manganese-ore-mining
ecotoxicological stress
seed bank
seed dispersal
disturbance
primary succession of vegetation
author_facet Dostál Petr
Kovář Pavel
author_sort Dostál Petr
title Seed rain and seed persistence of Calamagrostis epigejos (l.) roth in extreme ecotoxicological conditions at an abandoned ore-washery sedimentation basin
title_short Seed rain and seed persistence of Calamagrostis epigejos (l.) roth in extreme ecotoxicological conditions at an abandoned ore-washery sedimentation basin
title_full Seed rain and seed persistence of Calamagrostis epigejos (l.) roth in extreme ecotoxicological conditions at an abandoned ore-washery sedimentation basin
title_fullStr Seed rain and seed persistence of Calamagrostis epigejos (l.) roth in extreme ecotoxicological conditions at an abandoned ore-washery sedimentation basin
title_full_unstemmed Seed rain and seed persistence of Calamagrostis epigejos (l.) roth in extreme ecotoxicological conditions at an abandoned ore-washery sedimentation basin
title_sort seed rain and seed persistence of calamagrostis epigejos (l.) roth in extreme ecotoxicological conditions at an abandoned ore-washery sedimentation basin
publisher Sciendo
series Journal of Landscape Ecology
issn 1805-4196
publishDate 2013-12-01
description Clonal plants are very often among the first species to establish during primary succession. They may rapidly capture available space due to efficient vegetative propagation, but the question arises whether they may also rely on seed bank or seed rain during expansion and recovery after a possible disturbance. This question becomes increasingly important in extreme conditions of industrial deposit investigated in this study. We explored the two aforementioned seed sources in a clonal grass Calamagrostis epigejos within an ecotoxicologically stressed environment - abandoned tailings containment (former sedimentation basin) - from manganese-ore mining. Density of seeds found in seed rain was 617 seeds m-2, and in soil seed bank 220 seeds m-2, based on an autumn survey. Soil seed pool was almost depleted until the following spring as only 13 seeds m-2 were present. This pattern contrasted with the capacity of C. epigejos to build a persistent soil seed bank as shown by a burial experiment. Seed rain was thus identified to be the sole reliable seed source that may assist in recovery of this species after a possible disturbance
topic clonal plants
calamagrostis epigejos
human-made habitats
abandoned tailings containment
manganese-ore-mining
ecotoxicological stress
seed bank
seed dispersal
disturbance
primary succession of vegetation
url https://doi.org/10.2478/v10285-012-0066-4
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AT kovarpavel seedrainandseedpersistenceofcalamagrostisepigejoslrothinextremeecotoxicologicalconditionsatanabandonedorewasherysedimentationbasin
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