Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Dominant species constrain effects of species diversity on temporal variability in biomass production of tallgrass prairie

View through CrossRef
Species diversity is thought to stabilize functioning of plant communities. An alternative view is that stability depends more on dynamics of dominant species than on diversity. We compared inter‐annual variability (inverse of stability) of aboveground biomass in paired restored and remnant tallgrass prairies at two locations in central Texas, USA. Data from these two locations were used to test the hypothesis that greater richness and evenness in remnant than restored prairies would reduce variability in aboveground biomass in response to natural variation in rainfall. Restored prairies were chosen to be similar to paired remnant prairies in characteristics other than species diversity that affect temporal variability in biomass. Variability was measured as the coefficient of variation among years (square root of variance/mean; CV), where variance in community biomass equals the sum of variances of individual plant species plus the summed covariances between species pairs. Species diversity over five years was greater by a factor of 2 or more in remnant than restored prairies because richness and evenness were greater in remnant than restored prairies. Still, the CV of community biomass during spring and CV of annual biomass production did not differ consistently between prairie types. Neither the sum of species covariances nor total community biomass differed between prairies. Biomass varied relatively little in restored compared to remnant prairies because biomass of the dominant species in restored prairies (the grassSchizachyrium scoparium) varied less than did biomass of other dominant and sub‐dominant species. In these grasslands, biomass response to natural variation in precipitation depended as much on characteristics of a dominant grass as on differences in diversity.
Title: Dominant species constrain effects of species diversity on temporal variability in biomass production of tallgrass prairie
Description:
Species diversity is thought to stabilize functioning of plant communities.
An alternative view is that stability depends more on dynamics of dominant species than on diversity.
We compared inter‐annual variability (inverse of stability) of aboveground biomass in paired restored and remnant tallgrass prairies at two locations in central Texas, USA.
Data from these two locations were used to test the hypothesis that greater richness and evenness in remnant than restored prairies would reduce variability in aboveground biomass in response to natural variation in rainfall.
Restored prairies were chosen to be similar to paired remnant prairies in characteristics other than species diversity that affect temporal variability in biomass.
Variability was measured as the coefficient of variation among years (square root of variance/mean; CV), where variance in community biomass equals the sum of variances of individual plant species plus the summed covariances between species pairs.
Species diversity over five years was greater by a factor of 2 or more in remnant than restored prairies because richness and evenness were greater in remnant than restored prairies.
Still, the CV of community biomass during spring and CV of annual biomass production did not differ consistently between prairie types.
Neither the sum of species covariances nor total community biomass differed between prairies.
Biomass varied relatively little in restored compared to remnant prairies because biomass of the dominant species in restored prairies (the grassSchizachyrium scoparium) varied less than did biomass of other dominant and sub‐dominant species.
In these grasslands, biomass response to natural variation in precipitation depended as much on characteristics of a dominant grass as on differences in diversity.

Related Results

Effects of Black-Tailed Prairie Dog on Shortgrass Vegetation of Western Kansas
Effects of Black-Tailed Prairie Dog on Shortgrass Vegetation of Western Kansas
Previous studies indicate the black-tailed prairie dog (Cynomys ludovicianus) alters its environment through grazing, clipping, and burrowing, which affect plant community composit...
Prairie Grouse
Prairie Grouse
Abstract Prairie grouse, which include greater prairie-chicken (Tympanuchus cupido), lesser prairie-chicken (T. pallidicinctus), and sharp-tailed grouse (T. phasianellus)...
Evapotranspiration from Northern Semiarid Grasslands
Evapotranspiration from Northern Semiarid Grasslands
Management of forage production for livestock grazing on semiarid grasslands depends on water availability. Evapotranspiration (ET) was measured using the Bowen ratio energy balanc...
summer
summer
Summer was a time for transplanting prairie wildflowers. We knew that we wanted to restore prairie on the cornfield in front of the Shack. How did we know where we could get these ...
Reproductive Stages Limiting Productivity of the Endangered Attwater’s Prairie Chicken
Reproductive Stages Limiting Productivity of the Endangered Attwater’s Prairie Chicken
An important concern of conservation biologists is determining what conditions most limit the number of individuals in endangered populations. Because time is a constraint, narrowi...
Simulating Strategic Implementation of the CRP to Increase Greater Prairie‐Chicken Abundance
Simulating Strategic Implementation of the CRP to Increase Greater Prairie‐Chicken Abundance
ABSTRACTThe Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) has the potential to influence the distribution and abundance of grasslands in many agricultural landscapes, and thereby provide habi...
Range‐wide population size of the lesser prairie‐chicken: 2012 and 2013
Range‐wide population size of the lesser prairie‐chicken: 2012 and 2013
ABSTRACTWe flew aerial line‐transect surveys to estimate the range‐wide population size of lesser prairie‐chickens (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus) in the Great Plains, United States i...
Diets of Prairie Dogs, Goats, and Sheep on a Desert Rangeland
Diets of Prairie Dogs, Goats, and Sheep on a Desert Rangeland
Diets of prairie dogs, goats, and sheep were examined by microhistological fecal analysis during 4 periods of a year in a desert rangeland in northern Mexico. Prairie dogs selected...

Back to Top