4.3 Article

The dynamics of the soil seed bank after a fire event in a woody savanna in central Brazil

Journal

PLANT ECOLOGY
Volume 215, Issue 10, Pages 1199-1209

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11258-014-0378-z

Keywords

Seed bank; Fire; Savanna; Cerrado; Recovery after fire; Germination

Funding

  1. CAPES

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The seed-bank dynamics of cerrado, a savanna-like vegetation type in central Brazil, was monitored for a year after a fire event in the mid-dry season. Fifty paired soil and litter samples were collected 1 day before and 1 day after the fire to record the immediate effects on the seed bank, and thereafter at monthly intervals to investigate the post-fire seed bank dynamics. The samples were hand-sorted and the intact seeds were classified as monocot or dicot and counted. All seeds underwent germination trials in a germination chamber for 1 month. Seeds that did not germinate were checked for the presence and viability of the embryo. The sorted soil samples were placed in a greenhouse for 6 months, and the count of emerging seedlings was added to the number of germinated and dormant seeds from the germination trials to estimate the total number of viable seeds per sample. The fire did not affect the total seed-bank density: 63 +/- A 8 seeds m(-2) before the fire, and 83 +/- A 20 seeds m(-2) (mean +/- A se) immediately after it. Although monocots represented 65 % of the pre-fire seed bank, 1 year after the fire, the monocot seed density did not reach the pre-fire value, whereas the density of dicot seeds increased threefold. After the fire, the viable seed density and species richness, decreased with the onset of the rainy season coinciding with germination in the field. Therefore, post-fire recruitment increases genetic variability and contributes to the persistence of plant populations in cerrado communities.

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