Impacts of mulch on prairie seedling establishment facilitative to inhibitory effects

Seedling establishment in semiarid prairie sites under reclamation can be facilitated by mulch due to its effects on seedbed conditions. Effects on plant recruitment can also be inhibitory, as mulch can filter out or attenuate environmental signals that break seed dormancy and can negatively affect early seedling performance. A manipulative field experiment was established to determine if straw and hay mulch facilitate seedling emergence and establishment. The reclamation site is an abandoned irrigation area in the mixed grass prairie of southern Alberta, Canada. Soil was tilled and the seedbed prepared through manual harrowing, then plots were broadcast seeded with Elymus trachycaulus, Bouteloua gracilis, Hesperostipa comata, Astragalus canadensis and Linum lewisii. Hay and straw mulch were applied at two rates [300 and 600gm-2]. Seedling emergence and survival were assessed through the first growing season. Both hay mulch rates increased E. trachycaulus and L. lewisii seedling emergence relative to bare ground. A. canadensis seedling emergence was more than ten times higher with low straw and both hay rates than with bare ground. Straw mulch facilitated seedling emergence at a low rate but had a neutral effect at high rates. Effects of low straw and both hay mulch rates on seedling establishment were facilitative for E. trachycaulus and L. lewisii and neutral for B. gracilis. Effects of high straw rates were neutral for E. trachycaulus and L. lewisii and hindered B. gracilis seedling establishment. These results clearly show that low mulch rates can increase native plant establishment during the critical first year of prairie reclamation as they were able to overcome microsite limitations.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mollard, Federico Pedro Otto, Naeth, M. Anne, Cohen Fernández, Anayansi C.
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:spa
Subjects:ALBERTA, BOUTELOUA GRACILIS, CANADA, ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, ENVIRONMENTAL SIGNALS, FORESTRY, GRASS, GRASSLAND, GRASSLAND RESTORATION, GRASSLAND RESTORATIONS, GROWING SEASON, INHIBITOR, IRRIGATION, LAND RECLAMATION, MIXED-GRASS PRAIRIE, MULCHING, NATIVE SPECIES, OLD FIELD RESTORATION, OLD-FIELD, PRAIRIE, RECLAMATION, RECRUITMENT [POPULATION DYNAMICS], RESTORATION, SEED DORMANCY, SEEDLING EMERGENCE, SEEDLING ESTABLISHMENT, SEEDLING PERFORMANCE, SOIL AMENDMENT, SURFACE AMENDMENTS, VEGETATION,
Online Access:http://ceiba.agro.uba.ar/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=47028
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id KOHA-OAI-AGRO:47028
record_format koha
institution UBA FA
collection Koha
country Argentina
countrycode AR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ceiba
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca Central FAUBA
language spa
topic ALBERTA
BOUTELOUA GRACILIS
CANADA
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION
ENVIRONMENTAL SIGNALS
FORESTRY
GRASS
GRASSLAND
GRASSLAND RESTORATION
GRASSLAND RESTORATIONS
GROWING SEASON
INHIBITOR
IRRIGATION
LAND RECLAMATION
MIXED-GRASS PRAIRIE
MULCHING
NATIVE SPECIES
OLD FIELD RESTORATION
OLD-FIELD
PRAIRIE
RECLAMATION
RECRUITMENT [POPULATION DYNAMICS]
RESTORATION
SEED DORMANCY
SEEDLING EMERGENCE
SEEDLING ESTABLISHMENT
SEEDLING PERFORMANCE
SOIL AMENDMENT
SURFACE AMENDMENTS
VEGETATION
ALBERTA
BOUTELOUA GRACILIS
CANADA
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION
ENVIRONMENTAL SIGNALS
FORESTRY
GRASS
GRASSLAND
GRASSLAND RESTORATION
GRASSLAND RESTORATIONS
GROWING SEASON
INHIBITOR
IRRIGATION
LAND RECLAMATION
MIXED-GRASS PRAIRIE
MULCHING
NATIVE SPECIES
OLD FIELD RESTORATION
OLD-FIELD
PRAIRIE
RECLAMATION
RECRUITMENT [POPULATION DYNAMICS]
RESTORATION
SEED DORMANCY
SEEDLING EMERGENCE
SEEDLING ESTABLISHMENT
SEEDLING PERFORMANCE
SOIL AMENDMENT
SURFACE AMENDMENTS
VEGETATION
spellingShingle ALBERTA
BOUTELOUA GRACILIS
CANADA
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION
ENVIRONMENTAL SIGNALS
FORESTRY
GRASS
GRASSLAND
GRASSLAND RESTORATION
GRASSLAND RESTORATIONS
GROWING SEASON
INHIBITOR
IRRIGATION
LAND RECLAMATION
MIXED-GRASS PRAIRIE
MULCHING
NATIVE SPECIES
OLD FIELD RESTORATION
OLD-FIELD
PRAIRIE
RECLAMATION
RECRUITMENT [POPULATION DYNAMICS]
RESTORATION
SEED DORMANCY
SEEDLING EMERGENCE
SEEDLING ESTABLISHMENT
SEEDLING PERFORMANCE
SOIL AMENDMENT
SURFACE AMENDMENTS
VEGETATION
ALBERTA
BOUTELOUA GRACILIS
CANADA
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION
ENVIRONMENTAL SIGNALS
FORESTRY
GRASS
GRASSLAND
GRASSLAND RESTORATION
GRASSLAND RESTORATIONS
GROWING SEASON
INHIBITOR
IRRIGATION
LAND RECLAMATION
MIXED-GRASS PRAIRIE
MULCHING
NATIVE SPECIES
OLD FIELD RESTORATION
OLD-FIELD
PRAIRIE
RECLAMATION
RECRUITMENT [POPULATION DYNAMICS]
RESTORATION
SEED DORMANCY
SEEDLING EMERGENCE
SEEDLING ESTABLISHMENT
SEEDLING PERFORMANCE
SOIL AMENDMENT
SURFACE AMENDMENTS
VEGETATION
Mollard, Federico Pedro Otto
Naeth, M. Anne
Cohen Fernández, Anayansi C.
Impacts of mulch on prairie seedling establishment facilitative to inhibitory effects
description Seedling establishment in semiarid prairie sites under reclamation can be facilitated by mulch due to its effects on seedbed conditions. Effects on plant recruitment can also be inhibitory, as mulch can filter out or attenuate environmental signals that break seed dormancy and can negatively affect early seedling performance. A manipulative field experiment was established to determine if straw and hay mulch facilitate seedling emergence and establishment. The reclamation site is an abandoned irrigation area in the mixed grass prairie of southern Alberta, Canada. Soil was tilled and the seedbed prepared through manual harrowing, then plots were broadcast seeded with Elymus trachycaulus, Bouteloua gracilis, Hesperostipa comata, Astragalus canadensis and Linum lewisii. Hay and straw mulch were applied at two rates [300 and 600gm-2]. Seedling emergence and survival were assessed through the first growing season. Both hay mulch rates increased E. trachycaulus and L. lewisii seedling emergence relative to bare ground. A. canadensis seedling emergence was more than ten times higher with low straw and both hay rates than with bare ground. Straw mulch facilitated seedling emergence at a low rate but had a neutral effect at high rates. Effects of low straw and both hay mulch rates on seedling establishment were facilitative for E. trachycaulus and L. lewisii and neutral for B. gracilis. Effects of high straw rates were neutral for E. trachycaulus and L. lewisii and hindered B. gracilis seedling establishment. These results clearly show that low mulch rates can increase native plant establishment during the critical first year of prairie reclamation as they were able to overcome microsite limitations.
format Texto
topic_facet ALBERTA
BOUTELOUA GRACILIS
CANADA
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION
ENVIRONMENTAL SIGNALS
FORESTRY
GRASS
GRASSLAND
GRASSLAND RESTORATION
GRASSLAND RESTORATIONS
GROWING SEASON
INHIBITOR
IRRIGATION
LAND RECLAMATION
MIXED-GRASS PRAIRIE
MULCHING
NATIVE SPECIES
OLD FIELD RESTORATION
OLD-FIELD
PRAIRIE
RECLAMATION
RECRUITMENT [POPULATION DYNAMICS]
RESTORATION
SEED DORMANCY
SEEDLING EMERGENCE
SEEDLING ESTABLISHMENT
SEEDLING PERFORMANCE
SOIL AMENDMENT
SURFACE AMENDMENTS
VEGETATION
author Mollard, Federico Pedro Otto
Naeth, M. Anne
Cohen Fernández, Anayansi C.
author_facet Mollard, Federico Pedro Otto
Naeth, M. Anne
Cohen Fernández, Anayansi C.
author_sort Mollard, Federico Pedro Otto
title Impacts of mulch on prairie seedling establishment facilitative to inhibitory effects
title_short Impacts of mulch on prairie seedling establishment facilitative to inhibitory effects
title_full Impacts of mulch on prairie seedling establishment facilitative to inhibitory effects
title_fullStr Impacts of mulch on prairie seedling establishment facilitative to inhibitory effects
title_full_unstemmed Impacts of mulch on prairie seedling establishment facilitative to inhibitory effects
title_sort impacts of mulch on prairie seedling establishment facilitative to inhibitory effects
url http://ceiba.agro.uba.ar/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=47028
work_keys_str_mv AT mollardfedericopedrootto impactsofmulchonprairieseedlingestablishmentfacilitativetoinhibitoryeffects
AT naethmanne impactsofmulchonprairieseedlingestablishmentfacilitativetoinhibitoryeffects
AT cohenfernandezanayansic impactsofmulchonprairieseedlingestablishmentfacilitativetoinhibitoryeffects
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spelling KOHA-OAI-AGRO:470282023-02-22T13:15:19Zhttp://ceiba.agro.uba.ar/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=47028AAGImpacts of mulch on prairie seedling establishment facilitative to inhibitory effectsMollard, Federico Pedro OttoNaeth, M. AnneCohen Fernández, Anayansi C.textspaapplication/pdfSeedling establishment in semiarid prairie sites under reclamation can be facilitated by mulch due to its effects on seedbed conditions. Effects on plant recruitment can also be inhibitory, as mulch can filter out or attenuate environmental signals that break seed dormancy and can negatively affect early seedling performance. A manipulative field experiment was established to determine if straw and hay mulch facilitate seedling emergence and establishment. The reclamation site is an abandoned irrigation area in the mixed grass prairie of southern Alberta, Canada. Soil was tilled and the seedbed prepared through manual harrowing, then plots were broadcast seeded with Elymus trachycaulus, Bouteloua gracilis, Hesperostipa comata, Astragalus canadensis and Linum lewisii. Hay and straw mulch were applied at two rates [300 and 600gm-2]. Seedling emergence and survival were assessed through the first growing season. Both hay mulch rates increased E. trachycaulus and L. lewisii seedling emergence relative to bare ground. A. canadensis seedling emergence was more than ten times higher with low straw and both hay rates than with bare ground. Straw mulch facilitated seedling emergence at a low rate but had a neutral effect at high rates. Effects of low straw and both hay mulch rates on seedling establishment were facilitative for E. trachycaulus and L. lewisii and neutral for B. gracilis. Effects of high straw rates were neutral for E. trachycaulus and L. lewisii and hindered B. gracilis seedling establishment. These results clearly show that low mulch rates can increase native plant establishment during the critical first year of prairie reclamation as they were able to overcome microsite limitations.Seedling establishment in semiarid prairie sites under reclamation can be facilitated by mulch due to its effects on seedbed conditions. Effects on plant recruitment can also be inhibitory, as mulch can filter out or attenuate environmental signals that break seed dormancy and can negatively affect early seedling performance. A manipulative field experiment was established to determine if straw and hay mulch facilitate seedling emergence and establishment. The reclamation site is an abandoned irrigation area in the mixed grass prairie of southern Alberta, Canada. Soil was tilled and the seedbed prepared through manual harrowing, then plots were broadcast seeded with Elymus trachycaulus, Bouteloua gracilis, Hesperostipa comata, Astragalus canadensis and Linum lewisii. Hay and straw mulch were applied at two rates [300 and 600gm-2]. Seedling emergence and survival were assessed through the first growing season. Both hay mulch rates increased E. trachycaulus and L. lewisii seedling emergence relative to bare ground. A. canadensis seedling emergence was more than ten times higher with low straw and both hay rates than with bare ground. Straw mulch facilitated seedling emergence at a low rate but had a neutral effect at high rates. Effects of low straw and both hay mulch rates on seedling establishment were facilitative for E. trachycaulus and L. lewisii and neutral for B. gracilis. Effects of high straw rates were neutral for E. trachycaulus and L. lewisii and hindered B. gracilis seedling establishment. These results clearly show that low mulch rates can increase native plant establishment during the critical first year of prairie reclamation as they were able to overcome microsite limitations.ALBERTABOUTELOUA GRACILISCANADAENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATIONENVIRONMENTAL SIGNALSFORESTRYGRASSGRASSLANDGRASSLAND RESTORATIONGRASSLAND RESTORATIONSGROWING SEASONINHIBITORIRRIGATIONLAND RECLAMATIONMIXED-GRASS PRAIRIEMULCHINGNATIVE SPECIESOLD FIELD RESTORATIONOLD-FIELDPRAIRIERECLAMATIONRECRUITMENT [POPULATION DYNAMICS]RESTORATIONSEED DORMANCYSEEDLING EMERGENCESEEDLING ESTABLISHMENTSEEDLING PERFORMANCESOIL AMENDMENTSURFACE AMENDMENTSVEGETATIONEcological Engineering