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BIOMASS AND NET PRIMARY PRODUCTION OF PROSOPIS GLANDULOSA (FABACEAE) IN THE SONORAN DESERT OF CALIFORNIA
Authors:M. Rasoul Sharifi  Erik T. Nilsen  Philip W. Rundel
Affiliation:Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine, California, 92717
Abstract:Prosopis glandulosa var. torreyana accounts for nearly 90% of the total plant cover in a mesquite woodland community near Harper's Well along the southern margin of the Salton Sea in the Sonoran Desert of California. Total above-ground biomass in ten individuals studied in detail ranged from 43–760 kg per plant and 1.9–8.5 kg m-2 canopy area. Stand biomass ranged locally from a high of 23,000 kg ha-1 near the wash to 3,500 kg ha-1 in the fringe of this mesquite stand. Net above-ground primary production for 1980 had a mean of 2.2 kg m-2 canopy for shrub forms and 5.3 kg m-2 canopy for tree forms. Mean Prosopis stand production for 1980 was 3,650 kg ha-1, an extremely high value for desert communities. This level of production is particularly high in relation to the low mean annual precipitation of approximately 70 mm. New woody tissues in trunk and branches accounted for 51.5% of the allocation of productivity in Prosopis, a remarkably high woody allocation for a desert plant. Only 33.6% of net primary production was allocated to leaves.
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