The composition of plant communities is in part determined by seedling recruitment, which depends on seed germination and seedling survival.  Because species differ in the optimal environmental conditions for germination it is expected that variations in timing and severity of disturbances have an effect on the relative abundance of plant species and the composition of the seed bank. The Pound Hill experiment aims to assess the effect of the timing of cultivation and soil disturbance on grasslands biomass and species composition through changes in the seed bank. It was established in 1991 in an area of Silwood Park that had been maintained for the conservation of arable weeds through an annual cultivation at various times of the year for at least a decade.  This regime transformed a wheat-cultivated land into a species-rich community of ruderal plants. The experimental area, which is protected from rabbits' damage, is divided in plots that since October 1992 have been cultivated in March, May or October.

The Pound Hill disturbance timing experiment was created by Professor Mick Crawley and has been maintained since 1991 with the support of the Department of Life Sciences at Imperial College London. The experiment is now part of the a network of long-term studies included in the Ecological Continuity Trust (ECT). 

Key Findings

The long-term cultivation and soil disturbance at different times of the year has resulted in very different plant communities among the three types of cultivation treatments. The abundance of most species is typically highest in the disturbance regime that best match their germination behaviour. For example, fall cultivation favours species whose seedlings can survive the rigors of the winter weather and thus have a head start the following spring. March cultivation selects for species that need cold temperatures to flower in spring and whose seedlings resist frost. Finally, species that flower after exposure to frost and grow fast are favoured under the May cultivation, as this regime exposes seedlings to short growing seasons with often dry environmental conditions (Crawley, 2004). 

Pound Hill google map

details Pound Hill experiment

Experimental design

Pound Hill experiment lies on acid, sandy soil of the Bagshot Series and is surrounded by naturally regenerated alder wood. A rabbit-prof fence separates an area of 100 x 40 m. Inside, four blocks of 36 x 36 m are divided into three plots of 36 x 8 m which are cultivated in March, May or October. The three cultivation treatments are then replicated four times. Disturbance consist of removing the vegetation followed by rotovating the ground to smooth soil.

In 1996, 1999 and 2002 all plots were treated with herbicide after the annuals seed production to control for perennial grass species.

Data

Two data sets are available for this experiment:

1. Data of aboveground standing biomass of each plant species present in all plots collected in July 2003 

2. Data of percentage of cover of each plant species collected in 2014, 2016, 2017, 2019. and 2020.

Find here the metadata file for this experiment (79KB)

Data for plant biomass and coverage is available for this experiment as cvs files described in the metadatada file. Data is open access and can be requested to Silwood Park Ecological Analyst.

Publications

Crawley MJ (2004) Timing of disturbance and coexistence in a species-rich ruderal plant communityEcology 85: 3277–3288. 

Crawley MJ (2005). Silwood Park and its history. In: Crawley MJ, ed. The Flora of Berkshire. Harpenden, Hertfordshire, UK: Brambleby Books, 215–253.

Crawley MJ (2021) The rise of Vulpia myuros (Poaceae) and the impact of cultivation-timing on plant community structure. British & Irish Botany 3(3): 362-372 

Pound Hill cultivation strips

From left to right, cultivation strips ploughed in May, October and March (March 2016)

cultivation strips Nov15

View of cultivation strips in November 2015

students working at the experiment

Masters students surveying the plant community at the experiment, October 2016

May 2016

Cultivation strips just after May cultivation, 2016 (Courtesy of Peter Wilkinson)

Pound Hill cultivation strips

Cultivation strips for the Pound Hill experiment. Exposed soil in March strips that had been recently ploughed

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