274 research outputs found

    Extractable nitrogen and microbial community structure respond to grassland restoration regardless of historical context and soil composition.

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    Grasslands have a long history of invasion by exotic annuals, which may alter microbial communities and nutrient cycling through changes in litter quality and biomass turnover rates. We compared plant community composition, soil chemical and microbial community composition, potential soil respiration and nitrogen (N) turnover rates between invaded and restored plots in inland and coastal grasslands. Restoration increased microbial biomass and fungal : bacterial (F : B) ratios, but sampling season had a greater influence on the F : B ratio than did restoration. Microbial community composition assessed by phospholipid fatty acid was altered by restoration, but also varied by season and by site. Total soil carbon (C) and N and potential soil respiration did not differ between treatments, but N mineralization decreased while extractable nitrate and nitrification and N immobilization rate increased in restored compared with unrestored sites. The differences in soil chemistry and microbial community composition between unrestored and restored sites indicate that these soils are responsive, and therefore not resistant to feedbacks caused by changes in vegetation type. The resilience, or recovery, of these soils is difficult to assess in the absence of uninvaded control grasslands. However, the rapid changes in microbial and N cycling characteristics following removal of invasives in both grassland sites suggest that the soils are resilient to invasion. The lack of change in total C and N pools may provide a buffer that promotes resilience of labile pools and microbial community structure

    Native Annual Plant Response to Fire: an Examination of Invaded, 3 to 29 Year Old Burned Creosote Bush Scrub from the Western Colorado Desert

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    Creosote bush scrub vegetation typically contains high diversity of native annual plants relative to shrubs, cacti, perennial herbaceous species, or other plant life forms. This vegetation type is also very susceptible to exotic, invasive annual plants, which promote fire by changing fuel properties. The impact of fire on most perennial species is severe but the impact on native annual plants is not well understood. We measured annual species composition in five sites that each contained paired burned and unburned stands in the western Colorado Desert, California. The burned stands at each site ranged in time since fire from 3 to 29 years ago. Annual plant cover, species richness, and soil chemical and physical properties were compared in the paired burned and unburned reference stands. Differences between paired stands at the time of each fire are assumed negligible since shrub cover across fuel breaks did not differ prior to each fire based on aerial photographs. Fires elevated soil pH but otherwise had little effect on other soil properties. In recently burned stands, invasive annual grass abundance increased while native annual plant cover and species richness decreased. However, in older burned stands, annual plant composition did not always differ between paired stands because invasive annual plant abundance was very high in both stands. Thus, while fires can have long-lasting negative impacts to perennial components of creosote bush scrub, invasive species can displace native annual plants regardless of whether or not a site burns, although fire disturbance appears to accelerate invasive plant dominance

    Interactions of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, critical loads of nitrogen deposition, and shifts from native to invasive species in a southern California shrubland

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    Anthropogenic nitrogen (N) deposition and invasive species are causing declines in global biodiversity, and both factors impact the diversity and functioning of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi. Shifts in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal (AMF) communities can generate feedback to native plants and affect their success, as was observed in California’s coastal sage scrub, which is a Mediterranean-type shrubland threatened by invasive grasses. As vegetation-type conversion from native shrubland to exotic annual grassland increased along a gradient of increasing N deposition, the richness of native plant species and of spore morphotypes decreased. Rapid declines in all plant and fungal values occurred at the critical load (CL) of 10–11 kg N·ha−1·year−1, indicating that AM fungi respond to the same environmental signals as the plants, and can be used to assess CL. Shrub root colonization also decreased along the N gradient, but colonization of the invasive grass was dominated by a fine AMF endophyte that was unresponsive to elevated N. A greenhouse experiment to assess AMF functioning showed that the native shrub Artemisia californica Less. had a negative growth response to an inoculum from high-N but not low-N soils, whereas the invasive grass Bromus rubens L. had a positive response to both inocula. Differential functioning of AM fungi under N deposition may in part explain vegetation-type conversion and the decline of this native shrubland
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