Seed bank composition and above-ground vegetation in response to grazing in sub-Mediterranean oak forests (NW Greece)

TitleSeed bank composition and above-ground vegetation in response to grazing in sub-Mediterranean oak forests (NW Greece)
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2008
AuthorsChaideftou, E., Thanos C. A., Bergmeier E., Kallimanis A., & Dimopoulos P.
JournalPlant Ecology
Volume201
Pagination255-265
ISBN Number1125800895
Keywordsá ruminants, Deciduous oak forests, deciduous oak forests á, grazing á browsing á, Grazing Browsing, greece, greece á wild boar, Ruminants, Soil seed bank, soil seed bank á, Wild boar, Wood pasture, wood pasture á
Abstract

We investigate the persistent soil seed bank composition and its relation to the above-ground flora of grazed and non-grazed sub-Mediterranean deciduous oak forests of NW Greece. Twenty-eight taxa were recorded in the soil seed bank and 83 taxa (70 taxa in plots of seed bank sampling) in the aboveground vegetation. The dominant tree species and many woodland species found in the above-ground vegetation were absent from the soil seed bank. Similarity between the soil seed bank and the aboveground vegetation decreased with grazing, and grazing led to a decrease of species richness in above-ground vegetation and soil seed bank. Beta diversity of vegetation among grazed and among nongrazed plots did not differ, but was significantly higher between grazed and non-grazed areas. Beta diversity of the soil seed bank declined with grazing. When applying classification tree and logistic regression analyses, non-grazed forest sites are clearly differentiated by the presence of Phillyrea latifolia, Euphorbia amygdaloides and Brachypodium sylvaticum. PCA ordination of above-ground species composition reflected a gradient from sites grazed by ruminants to non-grazed sites, but no clear structure was detected in the seed bank.