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Influence of Seed Mixture and Hydrological Regime on the Establishment of a Diverse Grassland Sward at a Site with High Phosphorus Availability

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TLDR
In this paper, three experiments were undertaken to investigate the influence of seed mixture on the establishment of a target grassland community on a site with high available phosphorus, and the results showed that seed mixture, timing of sowing, and seeding rate had an initial effect on the vegetation that established.
Abstract
Three experiments were undertaken to investigate the influence of seed mixture on the establishment of a target grassland community on a site with high available phosphorus. In the first experiment autumn- and spring-sown commercial seed mixtures were compared with seed harvested from a nature reserve with respect to their ability to produce an inundation grassland community similar to that described by the British National Vegetation Classification (NVC) as Agrostis stolonifera–Alopecurus geniculatus grassland (MG13). In the second experiment the composition and sowing rate of a commercial seed mixture were altered to investigate whether these factors were significant in the establishment of a sward similar to MG13. Similarly, in the third experiment the composition of a commercial seed mixture designed to achieve an alternative community, Cynosurus cristatus–Caltha palustris grassland (NVC code MG8), was sown. The vegetation resulting from each of these treatments was monitored with permanent quadrats for a 3-year period, and the hydrological regime of each quadrat location was modeled and quantified. The results showed that seed mixture, timing of sowing, and seeding rate had an initial effect on the vegetation that established. However, by the third year of monitoring there were no significant differences between these treatments, and hydrological regime had become the most important factor in determining the distribution of species. The vegetation was less diverse than predicted from germination tests and decreased in diversity over the monitoring period. It is suggested that this may be a result of the hydrological regime being unsuitable for several of the sown species or due to the extremely high available phosphorus concentration in the soil. This study highlights the need to understand the soil and hydrological conditions of a site before choosing a target community and designing a seed mixture.

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Citations
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Hay strewing, brush harvesting of seed and soil disturbance as tools for the enhancement of botanical diversity in grasslands

TL;DR: The restoration of two contrasting grassland types was examined using a replicated block experiment to assess the effectiveness of two methods of seed application, with hay strewing more effective at creating a sward similar to that of the donor site.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of management and landscape context in the restoration of grassland phytophagous beetles

TL;DR: By targeting grassland restoration within landscapes containing high proportions of species-rich grassland, dispersal limitation problems associated with restoration for invertebrate assemblages are more likely to be overcome.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recreating semi-natural grasslands: A comparison of four methods

TL;DR: Transfer of local hay appears to be a successful method of establishing local species when recreating semi-natural grasslands, and is generally cheaper than using commercial local seed mixtures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Implications of Plant Density on the Resulting Community Structure of Mine Site Land

TL;DR: It is shown that the differing intra- and interspecific density responses of these chenopod species provide an indication of the resulting community organization in semiarid regions of Western Australia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diminishing Returns from Higher Density Restoration Seedings Suggest Trade‐offs in Pollinator Seed Mixes

TL;DR: Evaluating the success of different native forb mixes and seeding rates using shared goals of restoration practitioners and agroecologists, namely percent native species cover, floral resources, native diversity, and cost-effectiveness highlights trade-offs and balance-points within restoration and pollination services goals.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Some steady-state solutions of the unsaturated moisture flow equation with application to evaporation from a water table

W. R. Gardner
- 01 Apr 1958 - 
TL;DR: Gardner as mentioned in this paper describes some STEADY-state solutions of the UNSATURATED MOISTURE FLOW EQUATION with application to EVAPORATION from a WATER TABLE.
Book

Introduction to plant population ecology

TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce plant population biology, and introduce the concept of a plant population population biology classifier, which can be used to measure plant population growth and fertility.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comparative study of seed number, seed size, seedling size and recruitment in grassland plants

Anna Jakobsson, +1 more
- 01 Mar 2000 - 
TL;DR: The relationships between seed size, seed number and recruitment may be an important underlying mechanism for abundance and dynamics of plant species in grassland vegetation and a direct link between evolutionary life-history theory, and theory of plant community structure is suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relationship between soil chemical factors and grassland diversity

TL;DR: In this paper, the relationship between soil extractable phosphorus and potassium and plant diversity has been investigated and it has been shown that high potassium contents are compatible with high values of diversity.
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