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. 1992 Sep;91(3):312-317.
doi: 10.1007/BF00317618.

Effects of nitrogen limitation on species replacement dynamics during early secondary succession on a semiarid sagebrush site

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Effects of nitrogen limitation on species replacement dynamics during early secondary succession on a semiarid sagebrush site

Terry McLendon et al. Oecologia. 1992 Sep.

Abstract

A soil nitrogen (N) availability gradient was induced on a disturbed sagebrush site in northwestern Colorado by fertilizing with nitrogen (high available N), applying sucrose (low available N), and applying neither nitrogen nor sucrose (control). Species composition was studied for 3 years. At the end of the study, N concentration of aboveground tissue of 3 major species was determined. The rate of species replacement was most rapid on plots receiving the sucrose treatment and was slowest on plots receiving the N treatment. Early-seral dominats had greater tissue N concentrations when availability of the resource was high but lower tissue N concentrations when available soil N became limited. Midseral dominants displayed the opposite pattern. These results suggest that the supply of available soil N, and therefore the dynamics of N incorporation in perennial plant tissue, is a primary mechanism in controlling the rate of secondary succession within this semiarid ecosystem.

Keywords: Competition; Disturbance; Nitrogen; Shrubland; Succession.

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