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Native Vegetation Composition in Crested Wheatgrass in Northwestern Great Basin
Institution:1. AFDS, Contractor, to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Earth Resources Observation and Science Center, 47914 252nd Street, Sioux Falls, SD, 57198, USA;2. U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Earth Resources Observation and Science Center, Sioux Falls, SD, 57198, USA;1. Graduate Program of the Department of Wildland Resources and Ecology Center, Utah State University, Logan, UT, USA;2. Research Geneticist USDA-ARS Forage and Range Research Laboratory, Logan, UT, USA.;3. Research Ecologist, USDA-ARS Forage and Range Research Laboratory, Logan, UT, USA.;1. Former Graduate Assistant, Department of Agriculture, Angelo State University, San Angelo, TX 76904, USA;2. Professor, Department of Agriculture, Angelo State University, San Angelo, TX 76904, USA;3. Research Associate, Department of Agriculture, Angelo State University, San Angelo, TX 76904, USA;1. Authors are Former Graduate Assistant and;2. Professor, Department of Agriculture, Angelo State University, San Angelo, TX 76909, USA
Abstract:Crested wheatgrass, an introduced perennial bunchgrass, has been seeded extensively on the rangelands of western North America. There is a perception that this species is very competitive and that it forms monoculture or low diversity stands where successfully seeded. However, there is limited information on species composition in sites previously seeded to crested wheatgrass. We measured native vegetation and environmental characteristics in areas seeded with crested wheatgrass across the northwestern Great Basin. Plant community composition within these crested wheatgrass stands was variable, from seedings that were near monocultures of crested wheatgrass to those that contained more diverse assemblages of native vegetation, especially shrubs. Environmental factors explained a range of functional group variability from 0% of annual grass density to 56% of large native bunchgrass density. Soil texture appeared to be an important environmental characteristic in explaining vegetation cover and density. Native vegetation was, for all functional groups, positively correlated with soils lower in sand content. Our results suggest environmental differences explain some of the variability of native vegetation in crested wheatgrass stands, and this information will be useful in assessing the potential for native vegetation to co-occupy sites seeded with crested wheatgrass. This research also suggests that crested wheatgrass seedings do not always remain in near monoculture vegetation states as seedings substantially varied in native vegetation composition and abundance with some seeded areas having a more diverse assemblage of native vegetation. In half the sites, there were five or more perennial herbaceous species and 63% of sites contained Wyoming big sagebrush. Although not exclusively true, species most commonly encountered in crested wheatgrass seedings are those that are able to minimize competition with crested wheatgrass via temporal (i.e., Sandberg bluegrass, annual forbs, annual grasses) or spatial (i.e., shrubs) differentiation in resource use.
Keywords:bunchgrass  crested wheatgrass  plant community dynamics  sagebrush  seeding
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