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COLONIZATION AND ESTABLISHMENT OF MISSOURI PRAIRIE PLANTS ON ARTIFICIAL SOIL DISTURBANCES. I. DYNAMICS OF FORB AND GRAMINOID SEEDLINGS AND SHOOTS
Author(s) -
Rapp Jody K.,
Rabinowitz Deborah
Publication year - 1985
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.1002/j.1537-2197.1985.tb08426.x
Subject(s) - graminoid , forb , biology , shoot , seedling , rhizome , growing season , colonization , botany , agronomy , ecology , grassland
We observed colonization and mortality of plants in small (26 m 2 ) artificial soil disturbances and undisturbed controls in a tall‐grass prairie from 1977–1980. This paper examines the dynamics of colonists based on mode of origin (seedlings and shoots) and broad taxonomic affinity (forbs and graminoids). Few seedlings colonized either disturbances or controls the first year, probably due to a severe drought in 1976 when few seeds were produced. Graminoid shoots were more abundant in disturbed sites than in controls the first year, probably due to the “edge effect” of cutting roots and rhizomes and stimulating new growth. For each year following the first, the number of current residents peaked early in the season and then declined, with the decline more precipitous for seedlings than for shoots. The population fluctuations of seedlings were very predictable, and separate years resembled each other. In contrast to seedling populations, graminoid shoot populations generally were accumulating throughout the study. Populations of forb shoots rose and fell, but the years did not resemble each other. Neither seedlings nor forb shoots showed a response to the new uncolonized soil resource of the artificial disturbances compared to controls, but graminoid shoots were more common on disturbed sites. These results suggest a nonequilibrium dynamic among colonizers of small‐scale microsites.

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