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ARS Home » Pacific West Area » Logan, Utah » Forage and Range Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #263920

Title: Differences in nitrogen uptake capacity between native and invasive grasses is dependent on temperature

Author
item Monaco, Thomas
item Leffler, Alan
item James, Jeremy

Submitted to: Oecologia
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 6/8/2012
Publication Date: 6/8/2012
Citation: Monaco, T.A., Leffler, A.J., James, J.J. 2012. Differences in nitrogen uptake capacity between native and invasive grasses is dependent on temperature. Oecologia. 171:51-60.

Interpretive Summary: Invasive annual grasses had highter rates of nitrogen uptake at high temperature, but both annuals and native perennials were limited by energy availabiliy at low temperature. At high temperature, root and leaf traits influenced uptake capacity but at low temperature, leaf traits were most important. Differences, however, were not entirely consistent between invasive and native species. Short-lived species (B. tectorum, T. caput-medusae, and E. elymoides) allocated energy to N uptake differently than long-lived species (A. cristatum and P. spicata).

Technical Abstract: The ability of exotic plants to displace natives is often attributed to physiological characteristics such as rapid growth conferring competitive ability. The ability of an exotic to displace natives, however, is a product of physiological traits and the environment. Invasion occurs under conditions that allow traits such as rapid growth to be expressed. We examine differences in N uptake between two native perennial grasses: Elymus elymoides and Pseudoroegneria spicata; two invasive annual grasses; Bromus tectorum and Taeniatherum caput-medusae; and one highly selected non-native perennial grass: Agropyron cristatum at various springtime temperatures. All species are found throughout the Intermountain West, USA. Averaged among temperatures, annual grasses had higher N uptake than native perennials and expressed traits consistent with an acquisitive life history. The strongest predictor of whole-plant N uptake was specific absorption rate (SAR) which was correlated with leaf N. These findings, however, were not consistent among temperatures. At low temperatures, differences in SAR between annual and native perennials were minor and specific root length and root [N] were not significantly different. Energy availability similarily limited N uptake in native and invasive grasses. A model of SAR based on temperature dependence of respiration identified differences among species, but not between invasive and native species. The model suggests B. tectorum, T. caput-medusae, and E. elymoides allocate a constant fraction of total energy harvested SAR while A. cristatum and P. spicata allocate an absolute amount of energy to SAR regardless of energy available. Our findings highlight the context-dependent nature of performance differences between native and invasive plant species.