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    • Rangeland Ecology & Management, Volume 68 (2015)
    • Rangeland Ecology & Management, Volume 68, Number 6 (November 2015)
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    Contrasting Mechanisms of Recovery from Defoliation in Two Intermountain-Native Bunchgrasses

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    Author
    Mukherjee, J. R.
    Jones, T. A.
    Adler, P. B.
    Monaco, T. A.
    Issue Date
    2015-11
    Keywords
    clipping tolerance
    Elymus wawawaiensis
    Pseudoroegneria spicata
    SLA
    tiller number
    timing of defoliation
    
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    Citation
    Mukherjee, J. R., Jones, T. A., Adler, P. B., & Monaco, T. A. (2015). Contrasting Mechanisms of Recovery from Defoliation in Two Intermountain-Native Bunchgrasses. Rangeland Ecology & Management, 68(6), 485–493.
    Publisher
    Society for Range Management
    Journal
    Rangeland Ecology & Management
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10150/656895
    DOI
    10.1016/j.rama.2015.07.011
    Additional Links
    https://rangelands.org/
    Abstract
    Grazing tolerance of dominant native species may determine the fate of rangeland ecosystems, and using native plant populations with good grazing tolerance in restoration seedings may improve ecosystem resilience, especially when domestic herbivores are present. We examined interspecific and intraspecific differences in shoot biomass and defoliation tolerance for two semiarid, perennial cool-season bunchgrasses native to the Intermountain West, USA, Pseudoroegneria spicata and Elymus wawawaiensis, on the basis of four functional traits (specific leaf area [SLA], plant basal area, tiller number, and tiller mass). We applied two treatments, control and boot-defoliation, where the latter included defoliation at the early-reproductive ("boot") stage, the phenological stage most vulnerable to herbivory, while the control treatment did not. We tested two contrasting hypotheses (i.e., that boot-defoliation tolerance is increased through either increases in SLA or through more favorable tiller demography). For shoot biomass, both grasses were less productive under the boot-defoliation treatment than for the control, but E. wawawaiensis displayed higher boot-defoliation tolerance than P. spicata. Interpopulation variation occurred in all four functional traits for P. spicata, but there were no such variation for E. wawawaiensis. The tiller demography hypothesis better explained boot-defoliation tolerance in both species, and neither SLA nor plant basal area was correlated with shoot biomass for either treatment. Of the traits measured, high tiller number served as the primary mechanism for shoot biomass and boot-defoliation tolerance in P. spicata, while tiller number and tiller mass were both important predictors of both shoot biomass and boot-defoliation tolerance. © 2015 Society for Range Management. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
    Type
    Article
    text
    Language
    en
    ISSN
    0022-409x
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1016/j.rama.2015.07.011
    Scopus Count
    Collections
    Rangeland Ecology & Management, Volume 68, Number 6 (November 2015)

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