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Soil seed bank and vegetation dynamics in Sahelian fallows; the impact of past cropping and current grazing treatments

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 October 2004

Bruno Hérault
Affiliation:
Department of Environmental Sciences & Management, University of Liège, Avenue de Longwy 185, B-6700 Arlon, Belgium
Pierre Hiernaux
Affiliation:
Tropenzentrum (Centre for Agriculture in the Tropics and Subtropics), University of Hohenheim (790), D-70593 Stuttgart, Germany

Abstract

The soil seed bank in a 5-y-old Sahelian fallow was studied through seed extraction and compared with germinations recorded either in controlled conditions, ex situ in a glasshouse, or in the field. The influence of phosphorus fertilizer and mulch application during the preceding crop period, and that of seasonal grazing regimes applied the last 2 y of fallowing, were assessed on the composition of the seed stock. Ctenium elegans, Fimbristylis hispidula, Merremia pinnata and Phyllanthus pentandrus accounted together for 75% of extracted seeds, 72% of ex situ, and 62% of in situ seedlings. Mulch treatment was correlated with the first axis of the canonical correspondence analyses performed on the seedling datasets. Mulch and phosphorus fertilizer treatments held similar responses, as they both favoured the seed bank of erect dicotyledons such as P. pentandrus and Cassia mimosoides. On the whole, the effects of grazing remained modest compared with the residual effects of past crop management practices. However, seedling densities increased as a result of dry-season grazing, while the soil seed bank decreased with wet-season grazing. Grazing also reduced the spatial heterogeneity of the seed bank rather than the overall number of species.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2004 Cambridge University Press

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