Journal article

Concurrent assessment of functional types in extant vegetation and soil seed banks informs environmental constraints and mechanisms of plant community turnover in temperate forests of south-eastern Australia

S Kasel, CR Nitschke, SC Baker, EC Pryde

Forest Ecology and Management | Published : 2022

Abstract

Our understanding of how environmental heterogeneity shapes plant community dynamics is largely based on above-ground diversity despite the importance of seed banks as reservoirs of genetic and taxonomic diversity that buffer plant populations and influence vegetation following disturbance. Using a plant functional trait approach, this study examined the importance of fire-related germination cues and environmental determinants of plant community turnover in wet forests of south-eastern Australia – forests of both high conservation value and the focus of current timber harvesting. We surveyed extant vegetation, soil seed banks, forest structure and edaphic properties across 62 sites burnt in..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning, State Government of Victoria


Funding Acknowledgements

This research was undertaken with Approval by the Victorian Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning (DELWP) under Research Permit Number 10008199. The work was supported by the Australian Research Council [Linkage Grant LP140100075], VicForests, as well as the Victorian DELWP iFER (Integrated Forest Ecosystem Research Project). We would like to thank S. Andrusiak and R. Berry for support with glasshouse facilities; and B. Smith, D. Lockwood and B. Drouyn for contribution to data collection. We thank two reviewers for comments that improved the manuscript.