Competition, Fire, and Nutients in a Mixed‐Grass Prairie
Variation in the intensity of competition has been proposed as a mechanism that may control the species diversity and composition of many kinds of communities, including North American prairie. Competition intensity is predicted to increase with soil fertility and decrease with disturbance, causing...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ecology (Durham) 1990-10, Vol.71 (5), p.1959-1967 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Variation in the intensity of competition has been proposed as a mechanism that may control the species diversity and composition of many kinds of communities, including North American prairie. Competition intensity is predicted to increase with soil fertility and decrease with disturbance, causing variation in the abundances of competitively subordinate species. Variation in competition intensity was examined in an experiment in which fire and fertilizer were applied to native mixed—grass prairie. Treatments consisted of annual burns, a single burn, and untreated control, and fertilization (N ≥ 15 replicates) applied to 7 x 5 m plots for two growing seasons. The experiment was repeated at a second site 15 km away. Fire reduced standing crop and litter, and increased the frequency of bare ground. Nutrient addition increased standing crop and decreased bare ground. Species composition and diversity were largely unaffected by fire. Two common species, Bouteloua gracilis and Carex obusata, were significantly more abundant in fertilized vegetation than in controls at both sites; species diversity decreased in fertilized plots. Vegetation responses to the treatments were similar at the two sites. To tests for variation in competition intensity with fire and nutrient availability, removal experiments were performed in each treatment at one site. Two tussocks each of Festuca ovina and Stipa spartea were chosen in each plot. One plant of each pair had all neighbors within 30 cm clipped and removed during two growing seasons. Each species grew larger and faster in the absence of neighbors, but the magnitude of this effect did not vary with fire, fertilizer, or standing crop. Fire and nutrient addition produced significant changes in the community structure of mixed—grass prairie but did not alter competition intensity in the manner predicted. |
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ISSN: | 0012-9658 1939-9170 |
DOI: | 10.2307/1937604 |