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The search for indigenous dune stabilizers: Germination requirements of selected South African species
Authors:I. C. Knevel  H. G. Venema  R. A. Lubke
Affiliation:(1) Botany Department, Rhodes University, 6140 Grahamstown, South Africa;(2) Present address: Laboratory of Plant Ecology, University of Groningen, PO Box 14, 9750 AA Haren, The Netherlands
Abstract:The coastline of South Africa is characterized by extensive dune fields which are threatened by development, and thus the demand of stabilization of drift sand will increase. The non-invasive alien grass speciesAmmophila arenaria is at present the dominant sand stabilizer. Due to its foreign origin and invasiveness in North America its use was criticized and indigenous sand-binding species would be preferred. The germination requirements of the nativeArctotheca populifolia, Ipomoea pes-caprae. Myrica cordifolia andScaevola plumieri were investigated. The results showed that for all four species the total germination time and germination phase could be shortened and germination success (number of germinated seeds) improved. The different scarification and stratification treatments broke the dormancy ofI. pes-caprae, M. cordifolia andS. plumieri, whereas the seeds ofA. populifolia were not dormant. Seeds ofI. pes-caprae andM. cordifolia had induced an innate dormancy, respectively, whereas the type of dormancy in seeds ofS. plumieri dormancy processes remained unknown.
Keywords:Ammophila arenaria   Dormancy  Dune pioneer  Foredune  Seed scarification  Seed stratification
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