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Research Project: INTEGRATED INVASIVE SPECIES CONTROL, REVEGETATION, AND ASSESSMENT OF GREAT BASIN RANGELANDS

Location: Great Basin Rangelands Research

Title: Mineral nitrogen in a crested wheatgrass stand: implications for suppression of cheatgrass

Authors

Submitted to: Rangeland Ecology and Management
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: June 28, 2011
Publication Date: January 1, 2012
Citation: Blank, R.R., Morgan, T.A. 2012. Mineral nitrogen in a crested wheatgrass stand: implications for suppression of cheatgrass. Rangeland Ecology and Management. 65:101-104.

Interpretive Summary: Cheatgrass is an exotic annual grass causing ecosystem degradation in western United States rangelands. We investigated potential mechanisms by which the perennial, crested wheatgrass, suppresses cheatgrass. Research focused on monthly extractable (mineral) soil nitrogen (N) and the proportional concentration of ammonium-N in a crested wheatgrass community by microsite (crested wheatgrass, un-vegetated interspace, shrub subcanopy) and soil depth (0-15, 15-30 cm) over a one-year period. Extractable soil N in crested wheatgrass microsites ranged from 0.24 to 1.66 mmol kg-1 and was not appreciably lower than other ecosystems we have measured in the Great Basin. The molar proportion of ammonium-N in the extractable soil pool beneath crested wheatgrass averaged over 85% for the year and is far greater than other plant communities we have measured in the Great Basin. We conclude that crested wheatgrass does not suppress cheatgrass by controlling extractable N below a threshold level; rather, we hypothesize that it may limit the conversion of ammonium-N to nitrate-N and thereby reduce nitrate-N availability to cheatgrass.

Technical Abstract: Cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum L.) is an exotic annual grass causing ecosystem degradation in western United States rangelands. We investigated potential mechanisms by which crested wheatgrass (Agropyron cristatum [L. Gaertn.], A. desertorum [Fisch. (Ex Link) Scult.]) suppresses the growth and invasibility of cheatgrass. Research focused on monthly extractable (mineral) soil nitrogen (N), net N mineralization potentials, and the proportional concentration of ammonium-N in a crested wheatgrass community by microsite (crested wheatgrass, un-vegetated interspace, shrub subcanopy) and soil depth (0-15, 15-30 cm) over a one-year period. Extractable soil N in crested wheatgrass microsites ranged from 0.24 to 1.66 mmol kg-1 and was not appreciably lower than the other microsites or other ecosystems we have measured in the Great Basin. The molar proportion of ammonium-N in the extractable pool of crested wheatgrass averaged over 85% for the year and is significantly higher than the other microsites and far greater than other plant communities we have measured in the Great Basin. We conclude that crested wheatgrass does not suppress cheatgrass by controlling extractable N below a threshold level; rather, we hypothesize that it may limit nitrification and thereby reduce nitrate-N availability to the nitrophile cheatgrass.

   

 
Project Team
Blank, Robert - Bob
Longland, William - Bill
Weltz, Mark
Swope, Sarah
 
Publications
   Publications
 
Related National Programs
  Pasture, Forage and Rangeland Systems (215)
  Crop Protection & Quarantine (304)
 
Related Projects
   ASSESSING HYDROLOGIC RESPONSE OF PLANT COMMUNITIES IN THE GREAT BASIN
   REDUCING THE IMPACT OF WILDFIRES IN NORTH AMERICAN DESERTS
   QUANTIFYING ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS DERIVED FROM IMPLEMENTING RANGELAND CONSERVATION PRACTICES WITHIN THE GREAT BASIN
   INTEGRATED INVASIVE SPECIES CONTROL, REVEGETATION, AND ASSESSMENT OF GREAT BASIN RANGELANDS
   QUANTIFYING PLANT GROWTH RESPONSE AND ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS DERIVED FROM IMPLEMENTING GRAZING LAND CONSERVATION PRACTICES.
   GREAT BASIN COOPERATIVE ECOSYSTEM STUDIES UNIT NFCA
   DEVELOPING ECOLOGICAL SITE DESCRIPTION STATE AND TRANSITIONS MODELS FOR GREAT BASIN RANGELAND PLANT COMMUNITIES
   GREAT BASIN ECOLOGICAL SITE DEVELOPMENT
   QUANTIFYING AND PREDICTING IMPACTS AND BENEFITS OF CONSERVATION ON GRAZING LANDS
   EVALUATION OF THE EFFECTS OF RANGELAND CONDITIONS ON THE SOURCES AND TRANSPORT OF DISSOLVED SOLIDS WITHIN THE UPPER COLORADO RIVER BASIN
   QUANTIFYING ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS DERIVED FROM IMPLEMENTING RANGELAND CONSERVATION PRACTICES TO IMPROVE WATER QUALITY
   Quantifying Soil Erosion and Runoff from Western Rangelands
 
 
Last Modified: 05/21/2013
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