Abstract
The germination ecology and the dynamics of the generative reproduction in populations of Digitalis purpurea L. were investigated in the field as well as in experiments. Germination of fresh seeds in the dark on moist filter paper appeared to differ between populations. These differences were eliminated when a moist natural soil functioned as germination substrate. An interaction between the spectral composition of light and the germination substrate was present. Germination in gradients of light, temperature and soil moisture revealed some clear-cut results. Germination proved to be strongly dependent on the percentage of vegetation cover. During two years of burial in litter bags, the number of buried viable seeds did not decrease. From one generation of seeds produced in a natural population, 18% was introduced into the buried seed bank, 10% germinated in autumn and 24% was present as a enforced dormant surface seed bank in late autumn. The results are discussed in relation to secondary succession. can be derived from Milton (1936), Salisbury (1942) and Thompson and Grime (1979). Soil disturbance and germination seem to be correlated in D. purpurea (Grime 1979). The purpose of this study is to analyse the dormancy and germination behaviour of D. purpurea in relation to the relevant environmental factors in order to explain the mechanisms of entry into, and the escape of D. purpurea seeds from a seed bank. Furthermore, an attempt will be made to quantify seed rain as well as the fate of different germinating and non-germinating seed rain fractions in space and time per unit area, in different stages of succession.