4.5 Article

Forb composition gradients and intra-annual variation in a threatened Pacific Northwest Bunchgrass Prairie

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 12, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.9021

Keywords

Bunchgrass Prairie; Grassland forbs; Palouse Prairie; Plant community; Starkey Experimental Forest and Range

Funding

  1. USDA Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station [05-JV-11261967-069]

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Grasslands are highly threatened and insufficiently protected terrestrial biomes. The neglect of grassland forbs in research has led to a lack of understanding of their role in biodiversity loss. By studying the Pacific Northwest Bunchgrass Prairie, it is revealed that forb community structure is primarily influenced by water drainage and soil depth.
Grasslands are among the most threatened and least protected terrestrial biome. Grassland forbs: (1) account for most of the floral diversity; (2) are not well studied because they have been overshadowed by grass-centered research; and (3) have been a major source for biodiversity loss. The Pacific Northwest Bunchgrass Prairie (PNB) of North America is one of the most endangered grasslands on earth. Knowledge of vegetation community dynamics in the PNB is based primarily on bunchgrasses. There is a paucity of information related to the PNB's diverse native perennial forbs (hereafter forbs). Consequently, PNB forb community patterns and dynamics are largely unknown. We describe forb community structure and its relationship to environmental factors and phenology. We sampled 29 plots in the Starkey Experimental Forest and Range, northeastern Oregon, at three different times during 2016 (April; May; July). Nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMS) indicated that the dominant gradient in forb composition was related (R-2 = 0.66) to slope and soil P and K, contrasting flat, poorly drained soils (scabflats) at one end with steep, well-drained soils at the other end. The secondary gradient (R-2 = 0.16) contrasted deeper, finer textured soils at one end with shallow, rocky soils at the other. Forb richness decreased by similar to 40% from April to July. NMS and Indicator Species Analysis (ISA) showed that most forbs had affinities toward spring. Ubiquitous forbs (e.g., Triteleia grandiflora, Camassia quamash) were sparse to absent by July. Contradictory to general descriptions of the PNB, forb cover and richness in drought-prone sites were comparable to mesic sites when spring data were considered. Our findings suggest that PNB grasslands contain diverse forb communities that are structured primarily by water drainage and soil depth. Conventional sampling concomitant with peak grass biomass is insufficient to characterize PNB forb communities, particularly for scabflats and the most drought-prone soils.

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