Abstract

Vegetation succession depends on the availability of suitable propagules in the soils, and an understanding of soil seed banks is important for effective vegetation restoration of abandoned croplands. Aims of this study were to identify characteristics of soil seed bank, relationship with standing vegetation, and potential significance of soil seed bank for vegetation restoration in abandoned croplands on the hilly-gullied Loess Plateau. Results of field survey, germination, and correspondence analysis showed that density of soil seed bank ranged from almost 900 through almost 6470 seeds m−2 at 0–5 cm depth and almost 120 through almost 2470 seeds m−2 at 5–10 cm depth, with species richness of 7–14. Early successional species dominated soil seed bank, while later successional species occurred only at low densities. Similarity between soil seed bank and standing vegetation was low (with an average of 0.261). Most important variables contributing to the variation of the standing vegetaion included soil water, extractable P, soil seed bank density, and aspect. Soil seed bank alone explained 32% of vegetation community variation. Potential for vegetation restoration from soil seed banks is limited, and it is recommended to transplant some later successional species into abandoned croplands to accelerate succession.

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