AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how forest edges, which have increased due to fragmentation, impact the soil seed bank of temperate forests in Europe, focusing on the preservation of forest specialist plants.
  • Conducted over three years, 2018-2021, it involved greenhouse experiments on 90 plots across various latitudes and management types, revealing significant edge effects on seed density, diversity, and the relationship to herb layer species.
  • Results indicate that while edges promote generalist species, they do not negatively affect forest specialists, suggesting that soil seed banks are vital for maintaining biodiversity in ancient forests.

Article Abstract

Aim: The amount of forest edges is increasing globally due to forest fragmentation and land-use changes. However, edge effects on the soil seed bank of temperate forests are still poorly understood. Here, we assessed edge effects at contrasting spatial scales across Europe and quantified the extent to which edges can preserve the seeds of forest specialist plants.

Location: Temperate European deciduous forests along a 2,300-km latitudinal gradient.

Time Period: 2018-2021.

Major Taxa Studied: Vascular plants.

Methods: Through a greenhouse germination experiment, we studied how edge effects alter the density, diversity, composition and functionality of forest soil seed banks in 90 plots along different latitudes, elevations and forest management types. We also assessed which environmental conditions drive the seed bank responses at the forest edge versus interior and looked at the relationship between the seed bank and the herb layer species richness.

Results: Overall, 10,108 seedlings of 250 species emerged from the soil seed bank. Seed density and species richness of generalists (species not only associated with forests) were higher at edges compared to interiors, with a negative influence of C : N ratio and litter quality. Conversely, forest specialist species richness did not decline from the interior to the edge. Also, edges were compositionally, but not functionally, different from interiors. The correlation between the seed bank and the herb layer species richness was positive and affected by microclimate.

Main Conclusions: Our results underpin how edge effects shape species diversity and composition of soil seed banks in ancient forests, especially increasing the proportion of generalist species and thus potentially favouring a shift in community composition. However, the presence of many forest specialists suggests that soil seed banks still play a key role in understorey species persistence and could support the resilience of our fragmented forests.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9546374PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/geb.13568DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

soil seed
24
seed bank
24
edge effects
20
seed banks
12
species richness
12
seed
9
species
9
bank responses
8
temperate european
8
forest
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!