Badlands,Seed Banks,and Community Disassembly |
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Authors: | Lora B. Perkins Kelsey R. Ducheneaux Gary Hatfield Scott R. Abella |
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Affiliation: | 1. South Dakota State University, Department of Natural Resource Management, Brookings, SD 57007, USA;2. The DX Ranch, Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation, Eagle Butte, SD 57625, USA;3. South Dakota State University, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Brookings, SD 57007, USA;4. University of Nevada Las Vegas, School of Life Sciences, Las Vegas, NV 89154-4004, USA |
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Abstract: | Soil seed banks are a key component of ecological resilience as they provide a temporal reserve for plant species richness and diversity. Soil seed banks depend on on-site reproduction, seed longevity, and seed immigration for maintenance. When immigration of seeds is lost due to a change in land use or a disturbance, such as fragmentation, seed banks rely on on-site reproduction and longevity for maintenance. Within a fragment without seed immigration, seed banks become vulnerable to extinction debt leading to community disassembly over a long time scale. Therefore, we investigated how long-term fragmentation impacts community disassembly in seed banks. Seed bank samples were taken from grassland fragments (sod tables, n = 28) and from the surrounding area (matrix, n = 28). Seed banks were germinated, and emerging plants were identified. We found that community disassembly was not predictable in regard to species identity, and specialist (P < 0.001) and perennial (P < 0.001) species were lost from fragments. However, seed banks in fragments maintained a similar grass-to-forb ratio compared with the surrounding vegetation. Therefore, the ability of seed banks to provide ecological resilience may be limited after long-term fragmentation and land managers may need to reseed specialist species and perennials into grassland fragments. |
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Keywords: | fragmentation grassland Great Plains resilience specialist species species diversity |
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