Therefore many Arctic tundra species have developed different degree of seed dormancy, enabling them to postpone seed germination to optimal conditions (Baskin and Baskin 2001). The https://www.selleckchem.com/products/mk-5108-vx-689.html Antarctic tundra consists mostly of cryptogams and has two native flowering plant species Colobanthus quitensis (Kunth) Bartl. and Deschampsia antarctica Desv. (Komárkowá et al.1985). Only one alien angiosperm, Poa annua L. has survived, bred and dispersed in the maritime Antarctic. While at Cierva Point (Antarctic Peninsula) a small patch of Poa pratensis has been noted (Pertierra
et al. 2013), this species does not produce seeds, and therefore does not form a soil seed bank. P. annua was introduced accidentally to the vicinity of Polish Antarctic Station Arctowski over 28 years ago (Olech and Chwedorzewska 2011; Chwedorzewska and Bednarek 2012). The local Antarctic population of this species forms tussocks (Wódkiewicz Sotrastaurin in vivo et al. 2013), while in the temperate zone the species is only loosely tufted (Grime et al. 1986). P. annua forms a soil seed bank in temperate regions (Lush 1988), as well as in the Antarctic (Wódkiewicz et al. 2013). We focused our research
on the characteristics of seed deposition and some aspects of the spatial heterogeneity of the soil seed bank of P. annua in the Antarctic. Our objective was to investigate if P. annua caryopses are deposited mainly (-)-p-Bromotetramisole Oxalate in the soil under or outside the tussocks. This is connected with safe sites for seed persistence, seed dispersal, the expansion mechanism and the possible further spread of the species. Our question was whether R428 clinical trial tussock enlargement may be mediated through seed deposition and new individual recruitment in the immediate vicinity of mother plants enabling the tussocks to expand by the means of seed dispersal. We were also interested in the deposition
of seeds influenced by strong local winds and a preliminary assessment of seed dispersal outside the tussock. Materials and methods Soil samples were collected from the vicinity of Arctowski Station (62°10′S, 58°28′W) occupied by a population of P. annua during the austral summer season 2011/2012. Twenty randomly selected tussocks with a diameter of 5–40 cm were investigated. We noted the diameter and height of each tussock and designated four sampling points for the soil seed bank assessment: one was situated directly underneath the tussock and the other 10 cm from the tussock edge (Fig. 1). We chose this spatial scale because we wanted to assess if seeds are deposited within the mother clump or if they are displaced away from their source. Furthermore, we assumed that the selected clump is the major source of seeds in the surrounding soil. In the area occupied by the studied population the distance between clumps is rather short (around 30–40 cm, see Fig. 2).