Seedling defoliation may enhance survival of dominant wheatgrasses but not Poa secunda seeded for restoration in the sagebrush steppe of the Northern Great Basin

Author:

Denton Elsie M1ORCID,Pyle Lysandra A123ORCID,Sheley Roger L1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Eastern Oregon Agricultural Research Center, United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Burns, 67826A Highway 205, OR 97720, USA

2. Sierra Foothills Research and Extension Center, University of California, Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Browns Valley, 8279 Scott Forbes Rd, CA 95918, USA

3. Department of Plant Sciences, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, 51 Campus Dr., Saskatchewan S7N 5A8, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Restoration of dryland ecosystems is often limited by low seedling establishment and survival. Defoliation caused by insects and small mammals could be an overlooked cause of seedling mortality. In the sagebrush steppe, we examined the effect of seedling defoliation on the survival of perennial grasses commonly used as restoration materials. Under field conditions, seedlings of three perennial bunchgrass species (non-native Agropyron cristatum, and native grasses Poa secunda and Pseudoroegneria spicata) were defoliated at two intensities (30 % and 70 % leaf length removal) and frequencies (one or two clippings) and compared to a non-defoliated control. Following emergence the first year, clippings occurred at the two-leaf stage; a second clipping occurred 1 month later for repeated defoliation treatments. We monitored seedling survival and tillering for 2 years. We expected higher defoliation intensity and frequency to reduce survival for all species, but only a few treatments reduced Po. secunda survival. Conversely, larger-statured Triticeae (wheatgrasses) benefited from some defoliation treatments. In both years, A. cristatum survival increased with repeated defoliation at both intensities. Defoliation did not affect Ps. spicata survival in the first year, but a single defoliation in the second year resulted in increased survival. In both A. cristatum and Ps. spicata, higher-intensity defoliation reduced the boost to survival resulting from defoliation frequency. Seedlings with more tillers had greater survival probabilities, but tiller number was unaffected by defoliation. Further research may elucidate mechanisms seedlings use to compensate for or benefit from defoliation. In the meantime, managers should aim to select defoliation-tolerant species if they anticipate herbivory will be problematic for restoration sites.

Funder

Range Current Research Information System

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science

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