Competitive ability is linked to rates of water extraction
- 31 January 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oecologia
- Vol. 75 (1), 1-7
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00378806
Abstract
The relative competitive abilities of Agropyron desertorum and Agropyron spicatum under rangeland conditions were compared using Artemisia tridentata ssp. wyomingensis transplants as indicator plants. We found A. desertorum to have substantially greater competitive ability than A. spicatum as manifested by the responses of Artemisia shrubs that were transplanted into nearly monospecific stands of these grass species. The Artemisia indicator plants had lower survival, growth, reproduction, and late-season water potential in the neighborhoods dominated by A. desertorum than in those dominated by A. spicatum. In similar, essentially monospecific grass stands, neutron probe soil moisture measurements showed that stands of A. desertorum extracted water more rapidly from the soil profile than did those of A. spicatum. These differences in extraction rates correlate clearly with the differences in indicator plant success in the respective grass stands. Nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations in Artemisia tissues suggested these nutrients were not limiting indicator plant growth and survival in the A. desertorum plots.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Rapid shifts in phosphate acquisition show direct competition between neighbouring plantsNature, 1987
- Characteristics of successful competitors: an evaluation of potential growth rate in two cold desert tussock grassesOecologia, 1987
- On the analysis of competition at the level of the individual plantOecologia, 1986
- Competition for Phosphorus: Differential Uptake from Dual-Isotope—Labeled Soil Interspaces Between Shrub and GrassScience, 1985
- GENOMICALLY BASED GENERA IN THE PERENNIAL TRITICEAE OF NORTH AMERICA: IDENTIFICATION AND MEMBERSHIPAmerican Journal of Botany, 1985
- Regression Analysis, Residual Analysis and Missing Variables in Regression ModelsOikos, 1985
- Bunchgrass architecture, light interception, and water-use efficiency: assessment by fiber optic point quadrats and gas exchangeOecologia, 1983
- Coping with herbivory: Photosynthetic capacity and resource allocation in two semiarid Agropyron bunchgrassesOecologia, 1981
- Carbon balance, productivity, and water use of cold-winter desert shrub communities dominated by C3 and C4 speciesOecologia, 1977
- The Analysis of Multidimensional Contingency TablesEcology, 1970