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Biomass dynamics and water use efficiencies of five plant communities in the shortgrass steppe

Biomass dynamics and water use efficiencies of five plant communities in the shortgrass steppe Standing crop biomass and water-use efficiency were estimated for five plant communities of the Central Plains Experimental Range in north central Colorado. Aboveground biomass by functional groups, surface litter amounts, and standing dead biomass were compared, as were vertical and size-class distributions of belowground biomass. Greater production and water-use efficiency values were found: (1) at coarse-textured sites, indicating the importance of the inverse texture effect, and (2) wherever site characteristics favored the establishment of lifeforms other than grasses, e.g., succulents, and shrubs. Seasonal aboveground biomass and water-use efficiencies for the grass component were similar among sites, even though the mixes of C 3 and C 4 grass species were different. Similar grass biomass values in very different communities suggested that high biomass and high water-use efficiencies were related less to grass types than to the abundance of non-grass life-forms. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Oecologia Springer Journals

Biomass dynamics and water use efficiencies of five plant communities in the shortgrass steppe

Oecologia , Volume 80 (2) – Aug 1, 1989

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References (15)

Publisher
Springer Journals
Copyright
Copyright © 1989 by Springer-Verlag
Subject
Life Sciences; Ecology; Plant Sciences
ISSN
0029-8549
eISSN
1432-1939
DOI
10.1007/BF00380143
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Standing crop biomass and water-use efficiency were estimated for five plant communities of the Central Plains Experimental Range in north central Colorado. Aboveground biomass by functional groups, surface litter amounts, and standing dead biomass were compared, as were vertical and size-class distributions of belowground biomass. Greater production and water-use efficiency values were found: (1) at coarse-textured sites, indicating the importance of the inverse texture effect, and (2) wherever site characteristics favored the establishment of lifeforms other than grasses, e.g., succulents, and shrubs. Seasonal aboveground biomass and water-use efficiencies for the grass component were similar among sites, even though the mixes of C 3 and C 4 grass species were different. Similar grass biomass values in very different communities suggested that high biomass and high water-use efficiencies were related less to grass types than to the abundance of non-grass life-forms.

Journal

OecologiaSpringer Journals

Published: Aug 1, 1989

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