Plant community responses to grassland restoration efforts across a large-scale precipitation gradient

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Authors
Watson, D. Fraser
Houseman, Gregory R.
Jameson, Mary Liz
Jensen, William E.
Reichenborn, Molly M.
Morphew, Alex R.
Kjaer, Esben
Advisors
Issue Date
2021-05-24
Type
Article
Keywords
Conservation practices , Conservation Reserve Program , Environmental gradients , Kansas , Plant community ecology , Plant diversity constraints , Productivity–diversity relationship , Restored grasslands , Species pool hypothesis
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Citation
Watson, D. F., Houseman, G. R., Jameson, M. L., Jensen, W. E., Reichenborn, M. M., Morphew, A. R., & Kjaer, E. L. (2021). Plant community responses to grassland restoration efforts across a large-scale precipitation gradient. Ecological Applications, 31(6), e02381. https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.2381
Abstract

Identifying how plant species diversity varies across environmental gradients remains a controversial topic in plant community ecology because of complex interactions among putative factors. This is especially true for grasslands where habitat loss has limited opportunities for systematic study across broad spatial scales. Here we overcome these limitations by examining restored plant community responses to a large-scale precipitation gradient under two common Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) restoration approaches. The two restoration strategies examined were CP2, which seeds a relatively low number of species, and CP25, which seeds a higher number of species. We sampled plant communities on 55 CRP fields distributed along a broad precipitation gradient (410–1,170 mm mean annual precipitation) spanning 650 km within the grassland biome of North America. Mean annual precipitation (MAP) was the most important predicator of plant species richness and had a positive, linear response across the gradient. To a lesser degree, restoration practices also played a role in determining community diversity. The linear increase in species richness across the precipitation gradient reflects the species pool increase from short to tallgrass prairie communities and explained most of the richness variation. These findings provide insight into the diversity constraints and fundamental drivers of change across a large-scale gradient representing a wide variety of grassland habitats. Across a broad environmental gradient, initial planting differences between restoration practices had lower effects on plant diversity than expected. This suggests that new strategies are needed to effectively establish diverse plant communities on large-scale restorations such as these.

Table of Contents
Description
Issue Online: 01 September 2021 Version of Record online: 16 July 2021 Accepted manuscript online: 24 May 2021
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons
Published on behalf of Ecological Society of America
Journal
Ecological Applications
Book Title
Series
PubMed ID
ISSN
1939-5582
1051-0761
EISSN