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Seeds in a rainforest soil and their relation to shifting cultivation in the Ivory Coast
Authors:ANNEKE de  ROUW CATHARINA van  OERS
Institution:Department of Vegetation Science, Plant Ecology and Weed Science, Agricultural University, Wageningen, The Netherlands
Abstract:In the Taï region of the Ivory Coast, mature forest is felled and burned and a crop of rice is grown; forest is then allowed to regenerate for 20 or more years before being cropped again. The top 10 cm of soil beneath a 21-year-old forest prior to felling contained 2000 viable seeds m?2 of mainly woody species of previous successional stages no longer represented in the vegetation. Seedling emergence was greater in full sunlight than under leaf canopy, especially for herbaceous species of open habitats. Burning destroyed almost half of the seeds, but overall germination of those that survived was advanced by about 2 weeks. Germination of some common pioneer species was enhanced by the fire. Provided that burning took place and the rice was planted immediately, vegetation arising from the seed bank did not present a problem. The density never exceeded 70 seedlings m?2 and little or no weeding was required. Species present at densities greater than 1 seedling 10 m?2 were all recorded in the seed bank.
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