Contribution of soil seed banks to vegetation resilience in coastal freshwater wetlands of subtropical Australia

Author:

Grieger Rebekah1ORCID,Capon Samantha J.12,Hadwen Wade L.123,Mackey Brendan13

Affiliation:

1. Australian Rivers Institute Griffith University Nathan Queensland Australia

2. School of Environment and Science Griffith University Nathan Queensland Australia

3. Climate Action Beacon Griffith University Nathan Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractQuestionsWhat role do soil seed banks play in the resilience of coastal freshwater wetland vegetation communities? How might soil seed bank composition and similarity to standing vegetation drive changes in vegetation expression, particularly given projected changes in climate?LocationSixty wooded coastal freshwater wetlands in southeast Queensland, Australia.MethodsWe surveyed standing vegetation and investigated soil seed bank composition through an 8‐month‐long emergence experiment.ResultsSoil seed bank assemblages were dominated by forb and sedge species (23% exotic), but composition varied throughout the study region. Spatial (north–south) and land‐use (urban–rural) gradients explained some variation in soil seed bank composition. Soil moisture and groundwater dependence also influenced species distributions, particularly for freshwater wetland species. The similarity of soil seed banks to standing vegetation was low. Species present in both extant and soil seed bank assemblages were commonly native wetland taxa, including one salt marsh species (Juncus kraussii).ConclusionsProjected climatic changes will likely drive changes in coastal freshwater wetland vegetation communities through increases in the frequency and intensity of disturbances (e.g., storm surge). Our results suggest that regeneration from soil seed banks could promote four potential scenarios: (1) expansion of weed communities, (2) expansion of salt marsh communities, (3) maintenance and expansion of wetland/terrestrial species, and (4) transformation to an unvegetated open water zone because of reduced regeneration success under changing conditions. These diverse vegetation futures highlight the vulnerability of wooded coastal freshwater wetlands and the need for research and management interventions to maintain their biodiversity and ecosystem services.

Funder

Griffith University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology

Reference83 articles.

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2. Restoring complex vegetation in urban settings: The case of tidal freshwater marshes

3. Assessment of invasive naturalised plants in south‐east Queensland;Batianoff G.N.;Plant Protection Quaterly,2002

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