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Decreased Germination (decreased + germination)
Selected AbstractsFire and species range in Mediterranean landscapes: an experimental comparison of seed and seedling performance among Centaurea taxaJOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, Issue 1 2002Miquel Riba Aim Fire is a major disturbance event in Mediterranean landscapes. In this paper, we experimentally assess the effects of fire and post-fire conditions on seed germination and establishment of twenty Centaurea taxa to test whether differences among taxa are associated with range size. Methods The taxa (species and subspecies) considered were classified as rare and widespread according to their `area of occupancy' in the Mediterranean coast of Spain and France. In a first experiment, we analyse the effects of heat-shock (particularly, room temperature, 70 and 110 °C) on percentage germination and speed of germination (T50). In a second experiment, we analyse the effects of post-fire conditions (shading and soil type: burned/unburned) on seed germination and establishment ability. Results Temperatures over 120 °C resulted in 100% mortality, while temperatures in the range of those expected to be found in the first centimetres down the soil profile during a wildfire (70,110 °C) had no effect on seed germination. Differences in germination percentage and T50 among taxa were not related to rarity. In the post-fire conditions experiment, decreased radiation (shading) increased percentage germination and T50 in most taxa, while burned soil decreased germination in some of them. The effects of post-fire conditions on seedling growth (number of leaves and leaf size) were also different among taxa, but such differences were not related to rarity. However, rarity was associated with low establishment ability, as rare taxa tended to show smaller seedling size and higher mortality rates under the whole range of conditions tested. Main conclusions The results obtained indicate that fire has a negative effect upon the survival of populations in all the taxa considered, and that rare-common differences in germination and seedling establishment are not directly related to disturbance by fire. As far as interspecific differences in range size are concerned, other factors, either alone or in combination with a low regeneration ability after fire, need to be explored further. [source] Soil seed banks in Mediterranean Aleppo pine forests: the effect of heat, cover and ash on seedling emergenceJOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, Issue 4 2000Ido Izhaki Summary 1 ,East Mediterranean Aleppo pine (Pinus halepensis) forests are subjected to periodic stand-replacing fires. We simulated two of the effects of fire on the germinable soil seed bank in four pine stands on Mt. Carmel, Israel, that differed in their post-fire ages. Soil samples were heated to 100 °C, or covered by pine ash. Vermiculite was used to simulate litter cover. 2 ,Heat exposure increased overall seedling density, richness and taxon diversity in all stands, but density of annual taxa (e.g. grasses and legumes) were not clearly affected. 3 ,Ash cover dramatically decreased germination of all taxa and highest germination was achieved with heating and no cover. Vermiculite cover resulted in intermediate germination levels. 4 ,The combined effect of heat exposure and ash cover, simulating a post-fire situation under a canopy of pine, reduced the germination level of all taxa in the soil seed bank. However, it also creates conditions that facilitate the establishment of pine seedlings from the canopy stored seed bank. [source] Wood-feeding beetles and soil nutrient cycling in burned forests: implications of post-fire salvage loggingAGRICULTURAL AND FOREST ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 1 2010Tyler P. Cobb 1Rising economic demands for boreal forest resources along with current and predicted increases in wildfire activity have increased salvage logging of burned forests. Currently, the ecological consequences of post-fire salvage logging are insufficiently understood to develop effective management guidelines or to adequately inform policy decision-makers. 2We used both field and laboratory studies to examine the effects of post-fire salvage logging on populations of the white-spotted sawyer Monochamus scutellatus scutellatus (Say) (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) and its ecological function in boreal forest. 3Monochamus s. scutellatus adults were relatively abundant in both burned and clear-cut logged sites but were absent from salvage logged sites. 4An in situ mesocosm experiment showed that the abundance of M. s. scutellatus larvae in burned white spruce bolts was linked to changes in total organic nitrogen and carbon in mineral soil. 5Organic nutrient inputs in the form of M. s. scutellatus frass increased mineral soil microbial respiration rates by more than three-fold and altered the availability of nitrogen. Changes in nitrogen availability corresponded with decreased germination and growth of Epilobium angustifolium and Populus spp. but not Calamagrostis canadensis. 6Although the present study focused on local scale effects, the reported findings suggest that continued economic emphasis on post-fire salvage logging may have implications beyond the local scale for biodiversity conservation, nutrient cycling and plant community composition in forest ecosystems recovering from wildfire. [source] Effects of smoke, heat, darkness and cold stratification on seed germination of 40 species in a cool temperate zone in northern JapanPLANT BIOLOGY, Issue 3 2009S. Tsuyuzaki Abstract The effects of smoke, heat, darkness and cold stratification on seed germination were examined for 40 species with various life history attributes. These species establish in early successional stages on a volcano and are distributed in cool temperate zones of northern Japan. Smoke decreased seed germination in 11 species and increased it in one species, Leucothoe grayana. Germination of Polygonum longisetum was enhanced by a combination of smoke and cold, and that of Aralia elata by smoke and heat. Heat increased germination for three species and decreased it for one. Cold stratification broke dormancy in seeds of 11 species. Continuous darkness decreased germination of 22 species and did not increase germination for any species, showing that approximately half of the species require light for maximum germination. Although most species are sun plants that establish in early stages of succession and/or in disturbed areas, smoke and heat do not enhance germination of these species after disturbance, even when the disturbance is fire. Germination of slender and/or large seeds tends to be decreased more by smoke, probably because of their larger surface area. Light is more important than smoke and heat for detection of disturbance and for seed germination in this region. However, despite the low fire frequency in the region, germination of a few species was increased by fire-derived stimuli. [source] |