Soil Seed Banks and Their Relation to Soil Properties in Hilly Landscapes

Plants (Basel). 2023 Dec 29;13(1):104. doi: 10.3390/plants13010104.

Abstract

For the prevention of hilly soils from erosion, a smart selection of crop rotations is very important. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of different agrophytocenoses on seed numbers in the soil runoff sediments and soil seed banks' relations to soil properties in hilly landscapes. This study analyzes long-term monitoring data from three different agrophytocenoses (permanent grassland, cereal-grass crop rotation and crop rotation with a row crop) set up on slopes of 9-11° steepness with collectors for soil and water installed. The soil of the southern exposition slope was a slightly eroded Eutric Retisol. In the soil of permanent grassland, the number of seeds was 4036 seeds m-2, 6.0 and 3.2 times smaller compared to cereal-grass crop rotation and crop rotation with a row crop. The seeds found in the soil runoff sediments composed, on average, 0.9% of the soil seed bank, and the number of seeds depended on the number of days with heavy precipitation during the plant vegetation period, as well as on the plant communities grown in a particular rotation. Correlation analysis showed the seed numbers' dependence on the soil's chemical and physical properties. Hill slopes were not affected by water erosion, when agrophytocenoses were based on perennial grassland and also cereal-grass crop rotation, where reduced soil tillage was applied.

Keywords: agrophytocenoses; edaphic factors; hill; seed bank; soil runoff sediments.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.