Are plant populations seed-limited? A review of seed sowing experiments.

We define seed limitation to be an increase in population size following seed addition. Here, we briefly consider how theoretical models deal with seed limitation and how seed sowing experiments can be used to unravel the extent of seed limitation in natural systems. We review two types of seed addition experiments: seed augmentation studies where seeds are added to existing populations; and seed introductions where seeds are sown in unoccupied sites. Overall, approximately 50% of seed augmentation experiments show evidence of seed limitation. These studies show that seed limitation tends to occur more commonly in early successional habitats and in early successional species. Most of the studies have concentrated on simply categorising populations as seed- or microsite-limited, but we believe that seed sowing experiments could be used to reveal much more about community structure, and we discuss possible future directions. In 53% of introduction studies (where seeds were sown at sites from which the species was known to be absent) the introduced species was recorded in at least one of the experimental sites following sowing. However, of the subset of studies where both seedlings and adult plants were recorded, 64% of sites contained seedlings while only 23% contained adults. This implies that, for many species, conditions for establishment are more stringent than conditions for germination. The successful establishment of plants in unoccupied patches indicates the potential for immigration to enhance local diversity (the spatial mass effect). Few studies continued monitoring for long enough to determine whether or not self-sustaining populations were successfully established, and no study attempted to link introduction sites to a putative natural source of propagules, or considered the dynamics of the metapopulation as a whole.

[1]  Keith E. MasJeus,et al.  Quantifying the Impact of , 2000 .

[2]  Lindsay A. Turnbull,et al.  Seed mass and the competition/colonization trade‐off: a sowing experiment , 1999 .

[3]  Stephen J. Wright,et al.  Light-Gap disturbances, recruitment limitation, and tree diversity in a neotropical forest , 1999, Science.

[4]  S. Pacala,et al.  Models Suggesting Field Experiments to Test Two Hypotheses Explaining Successional Diversity , 1998, The American Naturalist.

[5]  P. Jordano,et al.  Annual Variability in Seed Production by Woody Plants and the Masting Concept: Reassessment of Principles and Relationship to Pollination and Seed Dispersal , 1998, The American Naturalist.

[6]  James S. Clark,et al.  STAGES AND SPATIAL SCALES OF RECRUITMENT LIMITATION IN SOUTHERN APPALACHIAN FORESTS , 1998 .

[7]  W. Kunin Biodiversity at the edge: a test of the importance of spatial "mass effects" in the Rothamsted Park Grass experiments. , 1998, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[8]  M. Westoby,et al.  Population dynamics in sessile organisms: some general results from three seemingly different theory-lineages , 1997 .

[9]  E. Simms,et al.  Effect of seed predation on seed bank size and seedling recruitment of bush lupine (Lupinus arboreus) , 1997, Oecologia.

[10]  Ilkka Hanski,et al.  Metapopulation Dynamics: From Concepts and Observations to Predictive Models , 1997 .

[11]  David Tilman,et al.  COMMUNITY INVASIBILITY, RECRUITMENT LIMITATION, AND GRASSLAND BIODIVERSITY , 1997 .

[12]  O. Eriksson Regional dynamics of plants : a review of evidence for remnant, source-sink and metapopulations , 1996 .

[13]  O. Eriksson,et al.  Seedling recruitment in the perennial herb Lathyrus vernus , 1996 .

[14]  J. Silvertown,et al.  Plant life histories: ecological correlates and phylogenetic constraints - Preface , 1996 .

[15]  D. Goldberg Competitive ability: Definitions, contingency and correlated traits , 1996 .

[16]  B. Husband,et al.  A METAPOPULATION PERSPECTIVE IN PLANT POPULATION BIOLOGY , 1996 .

[17]  J. P. Grime,et al.  An Experimental Study of Plant Community Invasibility , 1996 .

[18]  Mark Rees,et al.  Quantifying the Impact of Competition and Spatial Heterogeneity on the Structure and Dynamics of a Four-Species Guild of Winter Annuals , 1996, The American Naturalist.

[19]  George C. Hurtt,et al.  The consequences of recruitment limitation: reconciling chance, history and competitive differences between plants , 1995 .

[20]  J. Maron,et al.  Impacts of defoliation by tussock moths (Orgyia vetusta) on the growth and reproduction of bush lupine (Lupinus arboreus) , 1995 .

[21]  J. Ehrlén Demography of the Perennial Herb Lathyrus Vernus. II. Herbivory and Population Dynamics , 1995 .

[22]  J. Quinn,et al.  Invasibility of experimental habitat Islands in a California winter annual grassland , 1995 .

[23]  J. Silvertown,et al.  spatial variation in the seed ecology of a woodland herb (primula vulgaris) in relation to light environment , 1995 .

[24]  Michael J. Crawley,et al.  Alternate bearing, predator satiation and seedling recruitment in Quercus robur L. , 1995 .

[25]  S. Louda,et al.  Effect of Inflorescence‐Feeding Insects on the Demography and Lifetime of a Native Plant , 1995 .

[26]  D. Kelly,et al.  The evolutionary ecology of mast seeding. , 1994, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[27]  P. Hulme Post-dispersal seed predation in grassland: its magnitude and sources of variation. , 1994 .

[28]  S. Pacala,et al.  SEEDLING RECRUITMENT IN FORESTS: CALIBRATING MODELS TO PREDICT PATTERNS OF TREE SEEDLING DISPERSION' , 1994 .

[29]  C. Thomas Extinction, colonization, and metapopulations: environmental tracking by rare species , 1994 .

[30]  Graeme Caughley,et al.  Directions in conservation biology , 1994 .

[31]  David Tilman,et al.  Limiting Similarity in Mechanistic and Spatial Models of Plant Competition in Heterogeneous Environments , 1994, The American Naturalist.

[32]  D. Tilman Competition and Biodiversity in Spatially Structured Habitats , 1994 .

[33]  K. Shea Matrix models in population ecology , 1994 .

[34]  J. Good,et al.  Factors affecting the distribution and spread of Rhododendron in North Wales , 1993 .

[35]  Petr Pyšek,et al.  Plant invasions and the role of riparian habitats: a comparison of four species alien to central Europe. , 1993 .

[36]  David Tilman,et al.  The maintenance of species richness in plant communities , 1993 .

[37]  R. Primack,et al.  Dispersal Can Limit Local Plant Distribution , 1992 .

[38]  P. Klinkhamer,et al.  Meta‐population dynamics of biennial plants: how to exploit temporary habitats , 1992 .

[39]  J. Silander,et al.  SEEDLING RECRUITMENT LIMITATION IN WHITE CLOVER (TRIFOLIUM REPENS; LEGUMINOSAE) , 1992 .

[40]  S. Lavorel,et al.  Evidence for lottery recruitment in Mediterranean old fields , 1992 .

[41]  J. Lawton,et al.  Species interactions, local and regional processes, and limits to the richness of ecological communities : a theoretical perspective , 1992 .

[42]  K. Thompson,et al.  Establishment from seed of selected Umbelliferae in unmanaged grassland , 1992 .

[43]  M. Johnston Rabbit grazing and the dynamics of plant communities , 1992 .

[44]  D. Tilman,et al.  DYNAMICS OF NITROGEN COMPETITION BETWEEN SUCCESSIONAL GRASSES , 1991 .

[45]  S. Harrison,et al.  Local extinction in a metapopulation context: an empirical evaluation , 1991 .

[46]  Michael J. Crawley,et al.  The population dynamics of plants , 1990 .

[47]  M. Mayer,et al.  The Persistence of Rare Prairie Grasses in Missouri: Environmental Variation Buffered by Reproductive Output of Sparse Species , 1989, The American Naturalist.

[48]  P. Chesson,et al.  Short-term instabilities and long-term community dynamics. , 1989, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[49]  D. Kelly Demography of Short-Lived Plants in Chalk Grassland. II. Control of Mortality and Fecundity , 1989 .

[50]  D. Peart SPECIES INTERACTIONS IN A SUCCESSIONAL GRASSLAND. II. COLONIZATION OF VEGETATED SITES , 1989 .

[51]  A. Duggan Population ecology of Cardamine pratensis L. and Anthocharis cardamines L. , 1989 .

[52]  M. Rees The population ecology of annual crucifers , 1989 .

[53]  J. Silvertown,et al.  Interactive Effects of Disturbance and Shade upon Colonization of Grassland: An Experiment with Anthriscus sylvestris (L.) Hoffm., Conium maculatum L., Daucus carota L. and Heracleum sphondylium L. , 1989 .

[54]  H. Pulliam,et al.  Sources, Sinks, and Population Regulation , 1988, The American Naturalist.

[55]  P. Klinkhamer,et al.  The importance of small-scale disturbance for seedling establishment in Cirsium vulgare and Cynoglossum officinale , 1988 .

[56]  T. Miller,et al.  Competitive Effects and Responses Between Plant Species in a First‐Year Old‐Field Community , 1987 .

[57]  R. May,et al.  Population dynamics and plant community structure: Competition between annuals and perrenials , 1987 .

[58]  A. Sheppard Insect herbivore competition and the population dynamics of Heracleum sphondylium L. (umbelliferae). , 1987 .

[59]  R. Reader,et al.  Topographic Variation in the Abundance of Hieracium Floribundum: Relative Importance of Differential Seed Dispersal, Seedling Establishment, Plant Survival and Reproduction , 1986 .

[60]  N. Fowler Density-dependent population regulation in a Texas grassland , 1986 .

[61]  R. Shaw,et al.  Density-dependence in Salvia lyrata, a herbaceous perennial: the effects of experimental alteration of seed densities. , 1986 .

[62]  I. Noble,et al.  Dispersal, Variability, and Transient Niches: Species Coexistence in a Uniformly Variable Environment , 1985, The American Naturalist.

[63]  A. Watkinson ON THE ABUNDANCE OF PLANTS ALONG AN ENVIRONMENTAL GRADIENT , 1985 .

[64]  Peter Chesson,et al.  Coexistence Mediated by Recruitment Fluctuations: A Field Guide to the Storage Effect , 1985, The American Naturalist.

[65]  M. Crawley,et al.  The establishment of seedlings from primary and regrowth seeds of ragwort (Senecio jacobaea). , 1985 .

[66]  A. Gill,et al.  Predator Satiation and Site Alteration Following Fire: Mass Reproduction of Alpine Ash (Eucalyptus Delegatensis) in Southeastern Australia , 1984 .

[67]  Brent H. Smith Demography of Floerkea proserpinacoides, a forest-floor annual. III: Dynamics of seed and seedling populations , 1983 .

[68]  I. Hanski,et al.  Coexistence in a Patchy Environment: Three Species of Daphnia in Rock Pools , 1983 .

[69]  D. Tilman Resource competition and community structure. , 1983, Monographs in population biology.

[70]  K. Gross,et al.  Colonizing Abilities of 'Biennial' Plant Species in Relation to Ground Cover: Implications for their Distributions in a Successional Sere , 1982 .

[71]  P. Keddy EXPERIMENTAL DEMOGRAPHY OF THE SAND-DUNE ANNUAL, CAKILE EDENTULA, GROWING ALONG AN ENVIRONMENTAL GRADIENT IN NOVA SCOTIA , 1981 .

[72]  P. Chesson,et al.  Environmental Variability Promotes Coexistence in Lottery Competitive Systems , 1981, The American Naturalist.

[73]  A. Hastings Disturbance, coexistence, history, and competition for space , 1980 .

[74]  K. Gross Colonization by Verbascum thapsus (Mullein) of an old-field in Michigan : experiments on the effects of vegetation , 1980 .

[75]  Jonathan Silvertown,et al.  The evolutionary ecology of mast seeding in trees , 1980 .

[76]  John L. Harper,et al.  THE GROWTH, DISTRIBUTION AND NEIGHBOUR RELATIONSHIPS OF TRIFOLIUM REPENS IN A PERMANENT PASTURE , 1989 .

[77]  D. H. Ashton Seed harvesting by ants in forests of Eucalyptus regnans F. Muell. in central Victoria , 1979 .

[78]  J. Harper,et al.  The Growth, Distribution and Neighbour Relationships of Trifolium Repens in a Permanent Pasture: III. The Establishment and Growth of Trifolium Repens in Natural and Perturbed Sites , 1979 .

[79]  S. Waite,et al.  A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF ESTABLISHMENT OF PLANTAGO CORONOPUS L. FROM SEEDS SOWN RANDOMLY AND IN CLUMPS , 1979 .

[80]  Thomas Anthony Hill,et al.  The biology of weeds , 1978 .

[81]  P. Werner COLONIZATION SUCCESS OF A "BIENNIAL" PLANT SPECIES: EXPERIMENTAL FIELD STUDIES OF SPECIES COHABITATION AND REPLACEMENT' , 1977 .

[82]  P. Sale Maintenance of High Diversity in Coral Reef Fish Communities , 1977, The American Naturalist.

[83]  P. Grubb THE MAINTENANCE OF SPECIES‐RICHNESS IN PLANT COMMUNITIES: THE IMPORTANCE OF THE REGENERATION NICHE , 1977 .

[84]  Daniel H. Janzen,et al.  Why Bamboos Wait So Long to Flower , 1976 .

[85]  Robert A. Armstrong,et al.  Fugitive Species: Experiments with Fungi and Some Theoretical Considerations , 1976 .

[86]  P. B. Cavers,et al.  Population Dynamics of the Perennial Herbs Plantago Major L. and P. Rugelii Decne , 1976 .

[87]  R. Macarthur,et al.  Competition among Fugitive Species in a Harlequin Environment , 1972 .

[88]  R. Levins,et al.  Regional Coexistence of Species and Competition between Rare Species. , 1971, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[89]  M. McNamara,et al.  The establishment. , 1971, Canadian Medical Association journal.

[90]  R. Levins Some Demographic and Genetic Consequences of Environmental Heterogeneity for Biological Control , 1969 .

[91]  J. Harper,et al.  Studies in the Dynamics of Plant Populations: II. Components and Regulation of a Natural Population of Rumex Acetosella L. , 1968 .

[92]  J. Harper,et al.  Studies in the dynamics of plant populations. 1. The fate of seed and transplants introduced into various habitats. , 1967 .

[93]  J. Harper,et al.  CONTROLLED INTERFERENCE WITH NATURAL POPULATIONS OF PLANTAGO LANCEOLATA, P. MAJOR AND P. MEDIA , 1961 .

[94]  J. Harper,et al.  Factors affecting the germination and early establishment of plantains (Plantago lanceolata, P. media and P. major). , 1960 .

[95]  J. G. Skellam Random dispersal in theoretical populations , 1951, Biometrika.

[96]  H. Spencer The maintenance of species. , 2022 .