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Study: Plant seeds are shoe hitchhikers

The action of seeds picked up by shoes is more significant in dispersal over long distances than wind, a British study said Friday.

Researchers from Britain's Center for Ecology and Hydrology at Wallingford said people who wore hiking shoes or rubber boots in an experiment transported seeds more than 3 miles, the study published in The Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences found.

In the experiment, people wearing those shoes stepped in mud, then in a tray containing a specific number of wild-plant seeds. They then walked a given distance, from 1 meter (3 feet 3 inches) to 5 kilometers (a little over 3 miles).

Seeds remaining on the shoes were then counted.

While most seeds fell off in the first 20 meters, or about 65 feet, some stayed on the shoes for the 3-plus miles, the study found.

By contrast, dispersal by wind is generally limited to about 250 meters, or about one-sixth of a mile, the study said.

Researcher Matthias Wichmann told The New York Times that while long-distance dispersal by walking is probably rare, it might have a profound effect on the spread of certain species, particularly invasive ones new to a region.

Only a few seeds may go very far, he said. But these are the pioneers -- they colonize new sites.

Copyright 2008 by United Press International

Publication date: 11 October 2008   

Source: UPI-1-20081010-20121500-bc-britain-plantseeds-crn.xml

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