Megjelent a környezeti változók és a szikes gyepek magbank készletének kapcsolatát elemző cikkünk az Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment c. szakfolyóiratban. A közlemény összefoglalója az alábbiakban olvasható. A cikk elérhető a folyóirat honlapján (klikk a címre).
For an effective conservation and management in grasslands
it is essential to understand mechanisms sustaining biodiversity. To gain
knowledge is especially crucial in stressed grasslands harbouring a unique
flora and fauna, like alkali grasslands. Aboveground vegetation, seed bank and
environmental factors were studied in three stands of the following alkali
grassland types: (i) Artemisia dry alkali grasslands at highest elevations;
(ii) Puccinellia high and (iii) Puccinellia low grasslands at medium to low
elevations, and (iv)Juncus wet alkali grasslands at the lowest elevations. We
tested the following hypotheses: (i) Seed bank species diversity and density
are the highest in the most stressed grassland types, where regeneration by
seeds could have a major importance in sustaining vegetation diversity. (ii)
Seed bank density of hygrophytes increases with decreasing elevation, because
the cover of hygrophytes in the vegetation increases with decreasing elevation.
The mean seed bank density ranged from 30,104 up to 51,410 seeds/m2, which is
higher than in most dry grasslands. Both the lowest seed bank density and
diversity were detected in the most stressed Puccinellia high grasslands;
Spergularia salina was the only abundant seed bank species (possessing at least
1000 seeds/m2). These results not supported our first hypothesis. We detected
the highest seed densities of almost all hygrophyte species in the
lowest-elevatedJuncus grasslands. But, we did not find a significant monotonous
correlation between elevation and the overall hygrophyte seed bank density;
because most of the hygrophyte species were missing from the seed bank at the
medium-elevated, but most saline Puccinellia grasslands. Thus, our results only
partly supported the second hypothesis. In total we detected more species in
the seed bank than in the aboveground vegetation which emphasises that seed
bank plays an important role in sustaining the diversity of alkali grasslands.
However, characteristic graminoids possessed no considerable seed bank, except
for Juncus compressus (up to 38,619 seeds/m2). We can conclude that persistence
and establishment of most alkali grassland species are not supported by the
local persistent seed bank.
