A 50-yr study at Fairbanks, AK, was started in 1984 to determine soil seed
longevity of 17 weed species. Seeds were buried in mesh bags 2- and 15-cm
deep and were recovered 0.7, 1.7, 2.7, 3.7, 4.7, 6.7, 9.7, 19.7, and 24.7 yr
later. Viability was determined using germination and tetrazolium tests. By
24.7 yr after burial (YAB), no viable seeds were found for common
hempnettle, flixweed, foxtail barley, quackgrass, and wild oat. Bluejoint
reedgrass, which had no live seed 19.7 YAB, again had viability (1% at 15
cm) 24.7 YAB. Seeds of 11 other species were still viable: American
dragonhead (52%), marsh yellowcress (11 and 3.0% at 2 and 15 cm
respectively), common lambsquarters (2.8%), prostrate knotweed (2.8% at 15
cm), shepherd's-purse (2.8%), pineapple-weed (2.6%), rough cinquefoil
(2.3%), Pennsylvania smartweed (1.1%), common chickweed (0.4%), wild
buckwheat (0.3%), and corn spurry (0.1%). Seed dormancy 24.7 YAB was very
low (< 10%) for all species except American dragonhead (99%),
shepherd's-purse (40%), marsh yellowcress (23% at 2 cm), Pennsylvania
smartweed (18%), and rough cinquefoil (14%). At the beginning of the study,
declines in seed longevity were uniform between replicates, but variability
between replicates increased over time for all species except American
dragonhead, suggesting that some soil microsites are more favorable for seed
survival and may be seedbank “safe sites.” Results of this study demonstrate
that nonrandom seed mortality contributes to the spatial heterogeneity of
seed populations in the soil seedbank.