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Journal Article: Cheatgrass die-off as an opportunity for restoration in the Great Basin, USA: Will local or nonlocal commercial native plants succeed where exotic invaders fail?

Dates

Start Date
2013-05-01
End Date
2015-08-07

Citation

Great Basin Landscape Conservation Cooperative(administrator), Elizabeth Leger(Principal Investigator), Owen Baughman(Co-Investigator), Peter Weisberg(Co-Investigator), Owen Baughman(Author), Susan Meyer(Author), Zachary Aanderud(Author), Elizabeth Leger(Author), Journal Article: Cheatgrass die-off as an opportunity for restoration in the Great Basin, USA: Will local or nonlocal commercial native plants succeed where exotic invaders fail?, https://www.fws.gov/science/catalog

Summary

Bromus tectorum (cheatgrass) has widely invaded the Great Basin, U.S.A. The sporadic natural phenomenon of complete stand failure (‘die- off’) of this invader may present opportunities to restore native plants. A recent die-off in Nevada was precision-planted with seeds of the native grasses Poa secunda (Sandberg bluegrass) and Elymus elymoides (bottlebrush squirreltail), of both local and nonlocal origin, to ask: 1) Can native species be restored in recent B. tectorum die-offs? And 2) Do local and nonlocal seeds differ in performance? Additionally, we asked how litter removal and water addition affected responses. Although emergence and growth of native seeds was lower in die-off than control plots early in year one, in year two, [...]

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Communities

  • Great Basin Landscape Conservation Cooperative
  • LC MAP - Landscape Conservation Management and Analysis Portal

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Additional Information

Alternate Titles

  • Cheatgrass Die-off as a Restoration Opportunity, Trial I

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Type Scheme Key
urn:uuid urn:uuid 476f6f71-2a81-4f34-88ab-fdd221d808ae

Citation Extension

citationTypesciencePaper
languageeng

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