A source of hidden diversity: soil seed bank and aboveground populations of a common herb contain similar levels of genetic variation

Author:

Iberl K.1ORCID,Poschlod P.1ORCID,Reisch C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Plant Sciences, Ecology and Conservation Biology, University of Regensburg Regensburg Germany

Abstract

Abstract In many landscapes, successful re‐establisment of plant populations depends on the presence of diaspores, either near or directly beneath sites to be restored. The soil seed bank is, therefore, an important part of ecosystem resilience and a vital pillar for regeneration of genetic diversity in many plant populations. However, regeneration from the soil seed bank and the siubsequent restoration can only be considered successful when genetic diversity of restored populations is not eroded nor genetic differentiation inflated. We compared genetic variation within and among soil seed bank and aboveground populations of Origanum vulgare, to test whether genetically variable populations can be restored from the soil seed bank. We explored levels of genetic diversity within aboveground populations and the corresponding soil seed banks. Furthermore, we assessed the extent to which the soil seed bank differs genetically from the aboveground population. Levels of genetic diversity were to generally similar in aboveground populations and the corresponding soil seed banks. Only levels of inbreeding were slightly higher in the lower layer of the soil seed bank compared to the aboveground populations, probably because of selection processes acting against homozygotes accumulating in the seed bank. Furthermore, significant genetic differentiation between the aboveground population and the corresponding seed banks was completely absent. Across all sites, genetic differentiation between the soil seed bank was similar to that between aboveground populations, probably due to the absence of severe climate conditions, strong bottlenecks or disturbance events. Our conclusions support the possibility of successful re‐establishment of healthy, genetically variable plant populations after aboveground destruction or following soil re‐allocation from persistent seed banks.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,General Medicine

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