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The ten year cycle of the willow grouse of Lower Kolyma
Authors:A Andreev
Institution:(1) Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory, Colorado State University, 80523 Fort Collins, CO, USA;(2) Department of Range Science, Colorado State University, 80523 Fort Collins, CO, USA;(3) Present address: Department of Agronomy, University of Nebraska, 203 KCR Building, 68583-0817 Lincoln, NE, USA
Abstract:Summary The effects of defoliation on growth and nitrogen (N) nutrition were examined in populations of Agropyron smithii (western wheatgrass) collected from a heavily grazed black-tailed prairie dog (Cynomys ludovicianus) colony (ON-colony) and a nearby lightly grazed, uncolonized area (OFF-colony). Defoliated and nondefoliated plants were grown at low soil N availability with similar sized defoliated individuals of A. smithii from a grazing-exclosure population as a common competitor. Sequential harvests were made over 24 days following defoliation. Growth analysis plus biomass and N yield and distribution data were used to identify features which may contribute to plant defoliation tolerance. Defoliation reduced total production 34% across populations. Defoliated plants produced as much new blade tissue, but only 67% as much new root biomass as did nondefoliated controls. Plants from prairie dog colonies accumulated biomass at a faster relative rate than did plants from uncolonized sites, in part, because of a 250% greater mean relative growth rate of blades and more than 200% greater rate of biomass production per unit blade biomass. Total N accumulation was significantly greater in defoliated ON- than OFF-colony individuals. The mean relative accumulation rate of N was increased by defoliation in ON-colony plants, but reduced by defoliation in OFF-colony plants. The mean rate of N accumulation per unit root biomass was more than 300% greater in the ON- than OFF-colony population. Colony plants initially had a greater proportion of biomass and N remaining after defoliation in roots. Initial differences between populations in the distribution of biomass and N were eliminated as colony plants concentrated 24-day accumulation of biomass and N in aboveground structures. The data suggest that the combination of growth, N nutrition, and biomass and N distribution characteristics of the colony population likely confer a high rate of resource capture on heavily grazed prairie dog colonies.
Keywords:Biomass production  Defoliation  Grasslands  Nitrogen accumulation  Prairie dog colony
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