nena masthead
SENA Home Staff & Editors For Readers For Authors

Diminished Seed Banks of Two Endemic Scrub Herbs in Roadside Habitat Belie Their Population Booms: Are Robust Roadside Populations a Conservation Mirage?

Ella C. Segal1,2,* and Aaron S. David1

1Archbold Biological Station, 123 Main Drive, Venus, FL 33960. 2Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Tennessee at Knoxville, 1416 Circle Drive, Knoxville, TN 37996. *Corresponding author.

Southeastern Naturalist, Volume 22, Issue 4 (2023): 519–529

First published early online: 16 December 2023

Abstract
Persistent soil seed banks are a mechanism by which plant populations, especially those of pioneer species, replenish themselves after disturbance. Germination, and therefore aboveground replenishment, is linked to the abundance and vertical distribution of viable seeds in the soil, but it is unclear how different types of disturbance influence seed-bank structure. This distinction is critical for conservation, as anthropogenic sources increasingly alter the types of disturbance that ecosystems experience. We characterized the vertical structure of the seed banks of Paronychia chartacea (Papery Whitlow-wort) and Hypericum cumulicola (Highlands Scrub St. John’s Wort), 2 federally endangered herbs endemic to Florida scrub, in habitats that experience fire (scrub habitat) and vehicle disturbance (roadsides). Within populations of each species in each habitat, we collected soil from 4 soil depths. We used microscopy and a germination study to measure total and viable seed density, then related these values to habitat, soil depth, and aboveground vegetation density. The vertical structure of viable seeds in the seed bank did not significantly differ between the 2 habitats. The top 4 centimeters of soil contained the majority of viable seeds for both species in both habitats, and viable seeds were denser in scrub habitat compared to roadsides. Roadsides contained relatively depauperate seed banks compared to natural, interior scrub. Abundance of viable seeds did not relate to aboveground vegetation density, possibly reflecting higher germination or recruitment on roadsides. This finding calls into question the long-term stability of apparently healthy roadside populations of endemic herbs, and necessitates further research into how seed banks influence the dynamics of these vulnerable species.

pdf iconDownload Full-text pdf (Accessible only to subscribers. To subscribe click here.)

 



Access Journal Content

Open access browsing of table of contents and abstract pages. Full text pdfs available for download for subscribers.

Issue-in-Progress: Vol. 23 (2) ... early view

Current Issue: Vol. 23 (1)
SENA 22(3)

Check out SENA's latest Special Issue:

Special Issue 12
SENA 22(special issue 12)

All Regular Issues

Monographs

Special Issues

 

submit

 

subscribe

 

JSTOR logoClarivate logoWeb of science logoBioOne logo EbscoHOST logoProQuest logo