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(American Journal of Botany. 2001;88:1813-1817.)
© 2001 Botanical Society of America, Inc.


Ecology

Persistence of seed bank under thick volcanic deposits twenty years after eruptions of Mount Usu, Hokkaido Island, Japan1

Shiro Tsuyuzaki2 and Masaki Goto

Graduate School of Environmental Earth Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-0810 Japan

The topsoil that contained the seed bank became buried under thick tephra after the eruptions of Mount Usu during 1977 and 1978. To determine the seed bank potential of the topsoil 20 yr after the eruptions, i.e., in 1998, 408 100-cm3 samples were excavated under 115–185 cm of volcanic deposits. The topsoil was collected at 10-cm intervals along the horizontal scale and was divided into a 0–5 cm deep upper layer and a 5–10 cm deep lower layer. The seed bank was estimated by both the germination (GM) and flotation (FM) methods. In total, 23 species with an average seed density of 1317 seeds/m2 were identified by GM, and 30 species with a density of 2986 seeds/m2 were extracted by FM. The dominant species was Rumex obtusifolius, and perennial herbs, such as Carex oxyandra, Viola grypoceras, and Poa pratensis, were common. For nine species this study provided the first records for field seed longevity >20 yr. The seed density in the upper layer was double that in the lower layer, and the horizontal distribution was heterogeneous even at 10-cm intervals. We concluded that the seed bank has retained the original structure of the seed bank under the tephra and will persist longer with soil water content between 20 and 40%, no light, and low temperature fluctuations (±0.17°C of standard deviation in a day).

Key Words: buried seed populations • former topsoil • long seed longevity • Mount Usu • seed bank




This article has been cited by other articles:


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The HoloceneHome page
S. Hotes, P. Poschlod, and H. Takahashi
Effects of volcanic activity on mire development: case studies from Hokkaido, northern Japan
The Holocene, May 1, 2006; 16(4): 561 - 573.
[Abstract] [PDF]




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