University of Wollongong
Browse

Seed tolerance to heating is better predicted by seed dormancy than by habitat type in Neotropical savanna grasses

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 03:34 authored by Desirée Ramos, Ana Liaffa, Pedro Diniz, Cassia Munhoz, Mark Ooi, Fabian Borghetti, Jose Valls
Open savannas and wet grasslands are present under the same seasonal macro-climate in central Brazil. However, in open savannas, temperatures during fires are higher than in wet grasslands. Grasses dominate both ecosystems and exhibit large variation in seed dormancy. We hypothesise that seeds of grass species from open savannas are more tolerant to heating than those of wet grasslands. Also, assuming that dormant seeds remain longer in the soil than non-dormant seeds - thus being more likely to burn - we expect that dormant seeds are more tolerant to heating than non-dormant seeds. We tested the effects of heating at 80 and 110°C for 2.5 and 5.0min on the survival of seeds of 14 species, seven from each community, containing dormant and non-dormant species. Seeds of most species survived at 80°C, but seeds from open savannas maintained greater survival for 5min than seeds from wet grasslands. Seeds of most species died at 110°C, but dormant seeds survived more than non-dormant seeds. We conclude that species with seed dormancy experience selection for covarying characteristics that allow tolerance to heating in hotter fires. Our findings suggest that both seed dormancy and habitat-specific fire temperatures may contribute to the evolution of seed fire tolerance in Neotropical savannas.

Funding

Predicting climate change impacts on biodiversity: testing and applying new approaches

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

History

Citation

Ramos, D., Liaffa, A. B. S., Diniz, P., Munhoz, C. B. R., Ooi, M. K. J., Borghetti, F. & Valls, J. F. M. (2016). Seed tolerance to heating is better predicted by seed dormancy than by habitat type in Neotropical savanna grasses. International Journal of Wildland Fire, 25 (12), 1273-1280.

Journal title

International Journal of Wildland Fire

Volume

25

Issue

12

Pagination

1273-1280

Publisher website/DOI

Language

English

RIS ID

111391

Usage metrics

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC