Author:
Crowley Gabriel M.,Garnett Stephen T.
Abstract
Alloteropsis semialata (R.Br.) A.Hitchc. is one of the
first perennial grasses in monsoonal Australia to produce seed at the start of
the wet season. Patterns of growth and seed production and seed dynamics of
Alloteropsis semialata were examined in this study,
along with the effects of partial defoliation. Growth of
Alloteropsis semialata tussocks started with the first
pre-wet-season rains, and was then interrupted during a period with little
rain. Growth ceased before the end of the wet season, indicating that factors
other than moisture availability were limiting. Seeds of
Alloteropsis semialata were germinable on production,
but did not remain viable or persist on the soil surface through the dry
season. Most seeds and young seedlings were harvested and no seedlings were
recruited. Inflorescence production increased with plant size. Moderate
defoliation in the early wet season had no impact on plant growth, but reduced
inflorescence and seed production for at least 2 years. Absence of a seed bank
and early wet-season flowering mean that
Alloteropsis semialata is likely to be sensitive to
long-term over-grazing.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
34 articles.
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