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Role of propagule pressure and priority effects on seedlings during invasion and restoration of shrub-steppe

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Title Role of propagule pressure and priority effects on seedlings during invasion and restoration of shrub-steppe
Names Schantz, Merilynn C. (creator)
Sheley, Roger L. (creator)
James, Jeremy J. (creator)
Date Issued 2015-01 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Springer and can be found at: http://link.springer.com/journal/10530.
Abstract Plant invasion and restoration outcomes
are largely driven by the timing and magnitude of seed
dispersal, and by the performance of dispersed species
in an environment. Because seed dispersal controls
recruitment of newly arriving species and facilitates
safe site occupation, assembly will differ depending
on seed dispersal processes and variable environmental
conditions. The objective of this study was to
identify how annual and perennial grasses assembled
when dispersal times, propagule pressure, and water
availability were modified. To assess these effects, we
conducted a field experiment in an annual grass
invaded shrub-steppe ecosystem in eastern Oregon.
We tested the effects of seeding annual and perennial
grasses in autumn or delaying annual grass seeding
until spring, adding water, and varying annual and
perennial grass seeding rate by 150, 1,500, 2,500, or
3,500 seeds m⁻² on perennial and annual grass
seedling emergence through time and final density
and biomass. Providing perennial grasses a priority
effect by delaying annual grass seeding until spring
initially facilitated perennial grass establishment, but
this effect did not persist into the second growing
season. We found that if annual grass propagule
pressure exceeded 150 seeds m⁻², perennial grass
recruitment was limited. In addition, higher water
availability increased perennial grass establishment,
but was dependent upon annual grass propagule
pressure. These findings suggest that seeding perennial
grasses into annual grass dominated systems is
more dependent upon the existing propagule pressure
of annual grasses than the priority effects of perennial
grasses, the propagule pressure of perennial grasses, or
water availability.
Genre Article
Topic Dispersal
Identifier Schantz, M. C., Sheley, R. L., & James, J. J. (2015). Role of propagule pressure and priority effects on seedlings during invasion and restoration of shrub-steppe. Biological Invasions, 17(1), 73-85. doi:10.1007/s10530-014-0705-2

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