Abstract

We assessed the composition and spatial pattern of the persistent buried propagule bank (seeds and vegetative structures) of a treeline site in the Oregon Cascade Mountains. We monitored emergence from soil cores removed from four microsite types and recorded vegetation cover and seedling abundance on the site. Over 3100 seedlings/m2 emerged from the greenhouse soil cores; the seed bank was dominated by Juncus species. Few vegetative sprouts emerged. Vegetated microsites produced significantly more emergents than did bare soils, but even bare soils contained abundant seeds. Overall site cover was low and few seedlings occurred on the site. Discrepancies between aboveground and belowground abundance were common. Phyllodoce empetriformis and Luetkea pectinata were abundant in the vegetation and produced many seeds but were poorly represented in the seed bank and as seedlings on the site. Other species were abundant in the seed bank, but rare in the vegetation. Our results indicate that despite the abundance of seeds in bare soil, colonization is likely to be extremely slow. Key words: seed bank, subalpine, seedlings, microsite, spatial pattern.

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