Fire impact on a maquis soil seed bank in Cabaneros National Park (centralSpain)

Citation
P. Ferrandis et al., Fire impact on a maquis soil seed bank in Cabaneros National Park (centralSpain), ISR J PL S, 47(1), 1999, pp. 17-26
Citations number
46
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
ISRAEL JOURNAL OF PLANT SCIENCES
ISSN journal
07929978 → ACNP
Volume
47
Issue
1
Year of publication
1999
Pages
17 - 26
Database
ISI
SICI code
0792-9978(1999)47:1<17:FIOAMS>2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
The direct impact of fire on the soil seed bank and the changes observed on e year later were studied by analysis of seed content in sample layers at d epths of 0-2 cm and 2-5 cm. Fire had a severe but selective impact on the s ail seed bank: species with transient seed reserves accumulating on the soi l surface were eliminated, whereas species with persistent buried seed rese rves tended to remain in the soil after the passage of fire. Thick seed coa ts were shown to be an efficient mechanical protection barrier to fire. One year after fire, trade-off between input and output into seed bank produce d a conspicuous recovery of seed density and species richness on the soil s urface, and a pronounced impoverishment in the 2-5-cm-depth soil layer. In general, seed banks of woody species were severely depleted due to the lack of replacement following fire, with the exception of Erica, which maintain ed a high seed bank density in the upper soil layer. The post-fire recovery of soil seed populations was mainly due to two clearly differentiated grou ps of annuals. The first group was of species whose seeds survived fire, ge rminated, and completed their phenological cycle. They were mainly fire-eph emerals. The second group consisted of wind-dispersed species whose soil se ed banks had suffered a very severe (even total) depletion by fire. They we re mainly Gramineae and Compositae species which behaved as opportunistic f ire-sensitive invaders.