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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
The Effects Of Cheatgrass Invasion On Us Great Basin Carbon Storage Depend On Interactions Between Plant Community Composition, Precipitation Seasonality, And Soil Climate Regime, Toby M. Maxwell, Matthew J. Germino
The Effects Of Cheatgrass Invasion On Us Great Basin Carbon Storage Depend On Interactions Between Plant Community Composition, Precipitation Seasonality, And Soil Climate Regime, Toby M. Maxwell, Matthew J. Germino
Biology Faculty Publications and Presentations
- Annual-grass invasions are transforming desert ecosystems in ways that affect ecosystem carbon (C) balance, but previous studies do not agree on the pattern, magnitude and direction of changes. A recent meta-analysis of 41 articles and 386 sites concludes that invasion by annual grasses such as cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum L) reduces C in biomass across the Great Basin (Nagy et al., 2021). Reanalysis reveals that whether cheatgrass affects biomass C stocks is not generalizable, but rather depends on the considerable variation in climate across the subject sites. Our analysis suggests that accurate Great Basin-scale estimates of cheatgrass effects on C …
Weather Affects Post-Fire Recovery Of Sagebrush-Steppe Communities And Model Transferability Among Sites, Cara Applestein, T. Trevor Caughlin, Matthew J. Germino
Weather Affects Post-Fire Recovery Of Sagebrush-Steppe Communities And Model Transferability Among Sites, Cara Applestein, T. Trevor Caughlin, Matthew J. Germino
Biology Faculty Publications and Presentations
Altered climate, including weather extremes, can cause major shifts in vegetative recovery after disturbances. Predictive models that can identify the separate and combined temporal effects of disturbance and weather on plant communities and that are transferable among sites are needed to guide vulnerability assessments and management interventions. We asked how functional group abundance responded to time since fire and antecedent weather, if long-term vegetation trajectories were better explained by initial post-fire weather conditions or by general five-year antecedent weather, and if weather effects helped predict post-fire vegetation abundances at a new site. We parameterized models using a 30- yr vegetation …