Journal article
Microsite and litter cover effects on seed banks vary with seed size and dispersal mechanisms: Implications for revegetation of degraded saline land
C Farrell, RJ Hobbs, TD Colmer
Plant Ecology | SPRINGER | Published : 2012
Abstract
Seed movements and fates are important for restoration as these determine spatial patterns of recruitment and ultimately shape plant communities. This article examines litter cover and microsite effects on seed availability at a saline site revegetated with Eucalyptus sargentii tree rows interplanted with 5-6 rows of saltbush (Atriplex spp.). As litter accumulation decreases with increasing distance from tree rows, soil seed banks were compared between paired bare and litter-covered zones within three microsites; tree row, saltbush row closest to tree row and saltbush mid-row (middle row of saltbush between tree rows). Germinable seed banks of the four most abundant species with contrasting ..
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Funding Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank Chris Szota and Aleida Williams for invaluable assistance in the field. Thanks also to Michael and Margaret Lloyd for allowing us to work on their property. This research was funded through a PhD scholarship from The University of Western Australia and the Co-operative Research Centre (CRC) for Plant-based Management of Dryland Salinity.