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Competition by herbs as a limiting factor in shrub invasion in grassland: a test with different growth forms
Author(s) -
Brown Joel R.,
Scanlan J.C.,
McIvor John G.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of vegetation science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.1
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1654-1103
pISSN - 1100-9233
DOI - 10.2307/3237048
Subject(s) - shrub , tussock , agronomy , competition (biology) , biology , grassland , seedling , biomass (ecology) , herbaceous plant , perennial plant , grazing , botany , ecology
. We tested the hypothesis that seedling establishment, the critical stage in the invasion of grassland by shrubs, is limited by competition with perennial grasses in seasonally wet/dry savannas. We placed seeds of two invasive exotic shrubs – Cryptostegia grandiflora , a woody vine, and Acacia nilotica , an arborescent legume – into pots with a wide range of existing above‐ and below‐ground herbaceous biomass provided by either a tussock or a stoloniferous perennial grass. We also imposed different levels of watering frequency (5, 10 and 21 d), nutrient addition (+ and ‐) and grass clipping intensity (no clipping, clipped to 5 cm and clipped to 25 cm). There was no effect of any treatment on shrub seedling emergence or survival and all of the seedlings that emerged survived the 90‐d growing period. Herbaceous competition also failed to have an effect on biomass accumulation in shrub seedlings. More frequent watering significantly increased above‐ and below‐ground biomass accumulation for both shrub species and nutrient addition significantly increased Cryptostegia biomass accumulation. Based on these results, we question the proposition that reduction in competition by herbs via livestock grazing has been a significant factor in determining the rate or pattern of exotic shrub increase in the seasonally wet/dry tropics. We also question the suitability of the two‐layer soil moisture hypothesis as a basis for management practices to control the ingress of woody species into grasslands and open savannas.

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