The soil seed bank can buffer long-term compositional changes in annual plant communities
Niv DeMalach, Jaime Kigel, Marcelo Sternberg

TL;DR
This study investigates whether the soil seed bank stabilizes annual plant community composition over time, finding that it buffers long-term trends but not short-term variability, with effects varying by site conditions.
Contribution
It provides long-term empirical data showing that the soil seed bank buffers long-term compositional changes in annual plant communities, challenging some prior assumptions.
Findings
Seed bank composition differs from vegetation across years.
Long-term trends are weaker in seed banks than in vegetation.
Year-to-year variability is similar between seed bank and vegetation.
Abstract
Ecological theory predicts that the soil seed bank stabilises the composition of annual plant communities in the face of environmental variability. However, long-term data on the community dynamics in the seed bank and the standing vegetation are needed to test this prediction. We tested the hypothesis that the composition of the seed bank undergoes lower temporal variability than the standing vegetation in a nine-year study in Mediterranean, semi-arid, and arid ecosystems. The composition of the seed bank was estimated by collecting soil cores from the studied sites on an annual basis. Seedling emergence under optimal watering conditions was measured in each soil core for three consecutive years, to account for seed dormancy. In all sites, the composition of the seed bank differed from the vegetation throughout the years. Small-seeded and dormant-seeded species had a higher frequency…
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