Agro@mbiente On-line (Dec 2018)

Soil seed banks in successional stages of forest ecosystems in the Belém, Pará, Brazil, metropolitan region

  • Fernanda Pantoja Souza,
  • Walmer Bruno Rocha Martins,
  • Richard Pinheiro Rodrigues,
  • Vanda Maria Sales de Andrade,
  • Nayara Nazare Arraes Araujo,
  • Francisco de Assis Oliveira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.18227/1982-8470ragro.v12i4.4971
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4

Abstract

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The seed bank is essential for the initiation of natural forest regeneration, especially in ecosystems in the early stages of development, where there have been anthropogenic or natural disturbances. The objective of the current study was to evaluate seed bank dynamics in three forest ecosystems, two in Utinga State Park (PEUt) and one on the Federal Rural University of Amazonia (UFRA) campus, both in Belém, Pará, Amazonian Brazil. The ecosystems were: primary forest (PF), early successional forest (ESF), and late successional forest (LSF). For seed bank evaluation, five plots were installed in each forest ecosystem, and in each plot 5 soil samples were removed at a depth of 0-0.05 m. In the three ecosystems, the most abundant species in the seed bank were Cecropia obtusa, Phyllanthus tenellus and Vismia guianensis. Zoochoria was the dominant dispersion syndrome with 1,041 (67.8%) individuals. In the PF and LST ecosystems the predominant life form was tree, followed by shrub, whereas in the ESF the shrub life form predominated, followed by tree. Thirtyone species were recorded in PF, 26 in ISF, and 32 in LSF. In general, pioneers were most frequent ecological group, with 289 individuals (93.2%) in PF, 288 individuals (88.7%) in LSF, and 188 (75.06%) in ESF. Thus, all ecosystems possessed a high potential for resilience in case of possible forest disturbances, and the PF seed bank was considered the most diverse in terms of arboreal species.

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