1. Nitrogen deposition depletes the soil seed bank of a kermes oak thicket
- Author
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Lecha, Lucas, Pérez-Corona, Esther, Ochoa-Hueso, Raúl, and Manrique, Esteban
- Subjects
Soil Seed bank ,Plant-soil interactions ,Mediterranean ecosystems ,food and beverages ,Nitrogen deposition ,Global change - Abstract
Resumen de una presentación realizada en: I Simposio sobre Interacciones Planta-Suelo (ICA-CSIC, Madrid, 25-26 Febrero 2016), Aims: Nitrogen (N) deposition is a major driver of global change that can influence soil seed bank composition and abundance and seed germination. We investigated how eight years of simulated N deposition impacted the soil seed bank of a semiarid Mediterranean shrubland in Central Spain., Methods: The soil seed bank used in this study was collected from a kermes oak thicket located in the Nature Reserve El Regajal-Mar de Ontígola (Central Spain, 4o9’N, 3o29’W). Samples were collected on September 2014, following the spring/summer seed rain and prior to the onset of equinoctial rains. Consequently, we collected both transient and permanent seed banks without distinction. Three soil cores, 4.5 cm diameter and 4.0 cm deep, were collected from each of 24 plots that are fertilized since October 2007 (72 cores). Fertilization treatments corresponded to simulated N deposition rates of 0, 10, 20 and 50 kg N ha-1 year-1. Soils were incubated under semi-controlled conditions in a greenhouse and emerged plants were recorded., Results: During the course of the study, a total of 198 seedlings belonging to 21 species were recorded. When the number of germinated plants were compared among N treatments no significant differences were found (p, Conclusions: N deposition can influence the emergence of soil seed bank species. However, the mechanism linked to this effect, alteration of seed emergence physiology or compositional shifts of the seed bank, remains unknown.
- Published
- 2016