Using native grass seeding and targeted spring grazing to reduce low-level Bromus tectorum invasion on the Colorado Plateau
Reducing invasive species abundance near the leading edge of invasions is important for maintaining diverse, high-functioning ecosystems, but it can be hard to remove invasives present at low levels within desirable plant communities. Focusing on an invasive annual grass, Bromus tectorum , near the...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biological invasions 2021-03, Vol.23 (3), p.705-722 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Reducing invasive species abundance near the leading edge of invasions is important for maintaining diverse, high-functioning ecosystems, but it can be hard to remove invasives present at low levels within desirable plant communities. Focusing on an invasive annual grass,
Bromus tectorum
, near the edge of its range in the southern Colorado Plateau, we used an observational study to ask what plant community components were associated with lower levels of
B. tectorum
, and a manipulative experiment to ask if targeted spring grazing or seeding native competitors were effective for reversing low-level invasion. The observational study found that higher C
3
perennial grass cover and shrub cover were associated with lower
B. tectorum
abundance, and adult
Poa fendleriana
and
Pascopyrum smithii
plants had the fewest
B. tectorum
individuals within 50 cm. Our manipulative experiment used a randomized, hierarchical design to test the relative effectiveness of seeding native perennial grasses using different spatial planting arrangements, seeding rates, seed enhancements, and targeted spring grazing. Two years after seeding, seeded species establishment was 36% greater in high seed rate than unseeded plots, and high rate plots also had lower
B. tectorum
cover. One season after targeted spring grazing (a single, 2-week spring-grazing treatment 17 months post-seeding), grazed paddocks displayed trends towards higher seeded species densities and lower
B. tectorum
biomass in certain seeding treatments, compared to ungrazed paddocks. Results suggest high rate native grass seedings may be effective and short-duration spring grazing should be further evaluated as potential tools for preventing ecosystem conversion along invasion fronts. |
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ISSN: | 1387-3547 1573-1464 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10530-020-02397-0 |