4.4 Article

Restoration Potential of Sedge Meadows in Hand-Cultivated Soybean Fields in Northeastern China

Journal

RESTORATION ECOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 6, Pages 801-808

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/rec.12015

Keywords

Carex tussock; peatland restoration; propagule bank; Sanjiang Plain; seed bank; water regime

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [D41271106]
  2. CAS/SAFEA International Partnership Program for Creative Research Teams

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Sedge meadows can be difficult to restore from farmed fields if key structural dominants are missing from propagule banks. In hand-cultivated soybean fields in northeastern China, we asked if tussock-forming Carex and other wetland species were present as seed or asexual propagules. In the Sanjiang Plain, China, we compared the seed banks, vegetative propagules (below-ground) and standing vegetation of natural and restored sedge meadows, and hand-cultivated soybean fields in drained and flooded conditions. We found that important wetland species survived cultivation as seeds for some time (e.g. Calamogrostis angustifolia and Potamogeton crispus) and as field weeds (e.g. C. angustifolia and Phragmites australis). Key structural species were missing in these fields, for example, Carex meyeriana. We also observed that sedge meadows restored without planting or seeding lacked tussock-forming sedges. The structure of the seed bank was related to experimental water regime, and field environments of tussock height, thatch depth, and presence of burning as based on Nonmetric Multidimensional Scaling analysis. To re-establish the structure imposed by tussock sedges, specific technologies might be developed to encourage the development of tussocks in restored sedge meadows.

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