4.7 Article

Comparison of Aboveground Vegetation and Soil Seed Bank Composition among Three Typical Vegetation Types in the Karst Regions of Southwest China

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy12081871

Keywords

aboveground vegetation; soil seed bank; soil property; human intervention; karst

Funding

  1. National key Research and development program [2019YFC0507503-05]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32071540, 31760141]

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Rural agricultural activities greatly influence the restoration of the soil seed bank and aboveground vegetation. Different vegetation types have significant differences in species diversity and composition of aboveground vegetation and seed banks. Soil properties significantly affect the species composition and plant life forms of different vegetation types. Unsustainable land use has a profound impact on soil properties, aboveground vegetation, and the seed bank, but vegetation can quickly recover after farming is abandoned.
Rural agricultural activity generates cropland, secondary vegetation and straggling primary forest and can modify the soil seed bank (SSB), potentially impacting the restoration of preferred species. The interaction between vegetation and seed banks during the recovery process is dependent on management practices and recovery pathways. This study was carried out in Guilin of southwest China to assess the variation in plant diversity and species composition of both aboveground and soil seed banks across three typical vegetation types with different human interventions: orchard, bamboo shrub and primary forest. The results show that there were significant differences in the species composition and diversity of aboveground vegetation and SSB, as well as in soil properties among three typical vegetation types. The primary forest had the highest aboveground species diversity, while the orchard had the highest species diversity and seed density of SSB. In addition, principal component analysis (PCA) and canonical correspondence analyses (CCAs) showed that the species composition and plant life forms of the three typical vegetation types were significantly influenced by soil properties. Based on these findings, the characteristics of aboveground vegetation and the soil seed bank and their correlations with soil properties are expected to drastically change with human intervention. These results imply that unsustainable land use has greatly impacted soil properties, and consequently, the aboveground vegetation and SSB. Nevertheless, vegetation will recover quickly after farming is abandoned. The successful restoration of fragmented ecosystems requires the addition of seeds and seedlings of target species, especially perennial woody plants from the relevant natural ecosystems, to accelerate succession from bamboo shrub to forest.

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