Landscape Patterns in Soil-Plant Water Relations and Primary Production in Tallgrass Prairie

Author: Knapp, A. K.; Fahnestock, J. T.; Hamburg, S. P.; Statland, L. B.; Seastedt, T. R.; Schimel, D. S. Description: Landscape variation in soil water relations, leaf xylem pressure potential (°) and leaf-level net photosynthesis (A) in Andropogon gerardii, and net primary production (NPP) were evaluated during the 1989 and 1990 growing seasons in a northeast Kansas (USA) tallgrass prairie. Landscape patterns were assessed along transects that spanned upland and lowland topographic positions in an annually burned and a long-term unburned watershed. Landscape variability in volumetric soil water content (°)…

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Fire and Grazing Regulate Belowground Processes in Tallgrass Prairie

Author: Johnson, Loretta C.; Matchett, John R. Description: In tallgrass prairie, belowground processes are even more important than in forested systems because aboveground biomass and standing dead litter are periodically removed by frequent fires or grazers. Thus, studies that address factors regulating belowground processes are especially relevant for tallgrass prairie. We predicted that effects of grazing and burning differ belowground and that changes in root productivity caused by burning or grazing provide feedback that affects ecosystem fluxes of C and N. These differences in belowground response should be driven largely…

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Succession and Fire Season in Experimental Prairie Plantings

Author: Howe, Henry F. Description: Fire season influenced the cover of species and flowering guilds of plants in replicated grass and forb plantings of tallgrass prairie species in Wisconsin. Over two burn cycles at 3-yr intervals, cover increased in the rhizomatous perennials Andropogon gerardii, Aster simplex and Solidago altissima in plots burned in spring, or summer, or left unburned, but cover showed dramatic positive or negative responses to spring or summer burns in Agropyron repens, Erigeron annuus, Panicum virgatum, Phalaris arundinacea, and Rudbeckia hirta. Aggregate response of flowering guilds was…

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Fire and Litter Effects in Undisturbed Bluestem Prairie in Kansas

Author: Hulbert, Lloyd C. Description: Two-by-two-meter plots of undisturbed, nearly pure Andropogon gerardi prairie were subjected to four treatments: burning, clipping and removal of the litter, burning the clipped litter and returning the ash, and the control (natural litter). Treatments were started in early April before growth began. Differences in results among the denuded plots were small and nonsignificant, but highly significant differences were found between denuded and control plots. Tiller number was increased 1.5 to 2.7 times by removal of litter. Growth began earlier in denuded than control plots….

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Effect of fire on hard-coated Cistaceae seed banks and its influence on techniques for quantifying seed banks

Author: Ferrandis, Pablo; Herranz, Jose M.; Martinez-Sanchez, Juan J. Description: The impact of fire on hard-coated Cistaceae (Halimium ocymoides, Cistus ladanifer, and C. salvifolius) soil seed banks in a Mediterranean ‘maquis’ shrubland, and its effect on seed germinability were studied. The study also contrasts the effectiveness of two widely used techniques for quantifying seed banks, the seedling emergence and the physical separation methods, in relation to fire. The null hypothesis that a massive enhancement of physically-dormant Cistaceae seed germination by fire would make use of the time-consuming physical separation technique…

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Numbers and Biomass of Selected Insect Groups on Burned and Unburned Sand Prairie

Author: Anderson, Roger C.; Leahy, Theresa; Dhillion, Shivcharn S. Description: Abundance and biomass of selected insect groups were sampled on adjacent burned and unburned sand prairie for 3 years following a single spring burn. The abundance of all insects combined was significantly lower on the burned site than on the unburned site in the 1st yr postburn but not in subsequent years of the study. Of the selected insect groups, ants were significantly (P < 0.05) more abundant on the burned site than the unburned site for the 1st yr…

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