Abstract

ABSTRACT The abundance and vegetation cover of plant species with different seed masses growing on crude oil contaminated and uncontaminated field plots were examined. In addition, seedling mass and relative growth rate of eight plants in four seed mass classes were compared in contaminated and uncontaminated soils. Species producing seed in the second largest seed class (1.0 to 9.9 mg) were more common on contaminated than uncontaminated field plots. Species with seed in the smallest seed class (< 0.1 mg) were less common on contaminated than uncontaminated plots. Species with seed masses between 1.0 and 9.9 mg formed 15% more vegetation cover, and those with masses between 0.1 and 0.9 mg formed nearly 15% less vegetation cover on contaminated compared to uncontaminated field plots. In the growth chamber, species with larger seeds produced approximately 25% less seedling mass and exhibited a 32% reduction in relative growth rate, when grown in contaminated compared to uncontaminated soil. Small-seeded species had reductions of 95% in seedling mass and 72% in relative growth rate. Species with the highest relative growth rates in uncontaminated soil had the lowest seedling mass in contaminated soil. Seed mass and relative growth rate were negatively correlated (r = 0.866).

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