Seed Ecology of Hypericum gramineum , an Australian Forb
Anthony J. Willis, Richard H. Groves and Julian E. Ash
Australian Journal of Botany
45(6) 1009 - 1022
Published: 1997
Abstract
Aspects of the seed ecology of Hypericum gramineum Forster, a perennial forb that is native to Australia, were examined in several germination and seed predation experiments. Fresh seeds were innately dormant. Highest germination of non-dormant seeds occurred in the light at a temperature regime of approximately 35/25˚C. The results of field experiments indicated that there was no strongly seasonal effect on germination. Predators, such as ants, removed < 20% seeds, thereby suggesting that post-dispersal seed predation is relatively unimportant in the dynamics of H. gramineum populations. Seeds that escape predation and that fail to germinate after dispersal may be incorporated into a persistent soil seed bank.https://doi.org/10.1071/BT96074
© CSIRO 1997