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Type: Journal Article
Author(s): A. McGee; M. C. Feller
Publication Date: 1993

The species composition and density of seed banks in the forest floors and mineral soils of several undisturbed (immature, midseral forests) and disturbed (transmission line rights-of-way) ecosystems in southwestern British Columbia were estimated using the seedling-emergence method. The total soil surface area sampled was 9.4 m2. Germination behaviour of seven dominant species in response to depth of burial and substrate was also studied in a greenhouse experiment. A total of 16 289 seedlings germinated, representing 62 native and naturalized vascular plant species and several unidentified grass species. Most seedlings emerged from the forest floor, and the number of germinants generally decreased with increasing sample depth. Drier ecosystems had the lowest number and density of germinants. Burial depth significantly affected germination of all species tested. Mineral soil was equal, or superior, to forest floor as a germination substrate for all species tested. Depth-substrate interactions for several species indicated that the pattern of influence of burial depth in relation to substrate varied with species. Caution is urged extrapolating greenhouse seed-bank studies to potential weed populations in the field. Establishment of species from the seed bank will be a function of the depth to which the soil is disturbed and the kind of disturbance (burning, scarification) imposed.

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Citation: McGee, A.; Feller, M.C. 1993. Seed banks of forested and disturbed soils in southwestern British Columbia. Canadian Journal of Botany 71(12):1574-1583.

Cataloging Information

Topics:
Regions:
Keywords:
  • British Columbia
  • Canada
  • Coastal Western Hemlock zone
  • seed bank
  • seed density
  • seed diversity
  • seed germination
Record Last Modified:
Record Maintained By: FRAMES Staff (https://www.frames.gov/contact)
FRAMES Record Number: 4649