%0 Journal Article %J Plant Ecology %D 2013 %T Temporal dynamics of plant community regeneration sources during tallgrass prairie restoration %A Willand, J.E. %A S.G. Baer %A D.J. Gibson %A Klopf, R.P. %K chronosequence %K Community assembly %K diversity %K Propagules %K Species richness %X

Ecological restoration aims to augment and steer the composition and contribution of propagules for community regeneration in degraded environments. We quantified patterns in the abundance, richness, and diversity of seed and bud banks across an 11-year chronosequence of restored prairies and in prairie remnants to elucidate the degree to which the germinable seed bank, emerged seedlings, belowground buds, and emerged ramets were related to community regeneration. There were no directional patterns in the abundance, richness, or diversity of the germinable seed bank across the chronosequence. Emerged seedling abundance of sown species decreased during restoration. Richness and diversity of all emerged seedlings and non-sown emerged seedling species decreased across the chronosequence. Conversely, abundance and richness of belowground buds increased with restoration age and belowground bud diversity of sown species increased across the chronosequence. Numbers of emerged ramets also increased across the chronosequence and was driven primarily by the number of graminoid ramets. There were no temporal changes in abundance and richness of sown and non-sown emerged ramets, but diversity of sown emerged ramets increased across the chronosequence. This study demonstrates that after initial seeding, plant community structure in restored prairies increasingly reflects the composition of the bud bank.

%B Plant Ecology %V 214 %P 1169 -1180 %G eng %U https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11258-013-0241-7 %M KNZ001562 %R 10.1007/s11258-013-0241-7