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Role of charred wood, heat-shock and light in germination of postfire phrygana species from the eastern Mediterranean Basin

January 1, 1999

Seeds of 22 species collected from recently burned phrygana were tested for their response to fire-type cues of charred wood and heat-shock. All Cistus species were stimulated by brief heat-shock, as shown in previous studies; however, none responded to charred wood. Only one of the 22 species was stimulated by charred wood, and only in dark-inhibited seeds, and this response did not occur in the light. The lack of charred-wood-induced germination is in contrast to the substantial proportion of species with this germination response reported for mediterranean-type vegetation in California, the Cape region of South Africa, and Western Australia. Phrygana has many species with heat-shock-stimulated germination, primarily in the Fabaceae and Cistaceae. This germination cue is widespread in these two families, thus, the presence of heat-shock-stimulated germination is a result of homologous, rather than covergent, adaptations in mediterranean-climate ecosystems. Germination response to light was not randomly distributed with respect to fire-type response. Heat-shock-stimulated species were almost uniformly light neutral, in contrast to more opportunistic colonizing species with non-refractory seeds, in which half of the species responded positively or negatively to light.

Publication Year 1999
Title Role of charred wood, heat-shock and light in germination of postfire phrygana species from the eastern Mediterranean Basin
DOI 10.1080/07929978.1999.10676746
Authors Jon E. Keeley, Melanie Babr-Keeley
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Israel Journal of Plant Sciences
Index ID 1007884
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Western Ecological Research Center