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Title: Competition and abiotic stress among trees and shrubs in northwest Colorado

Journal Article · · Ecology; (USA)
DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1941654· OSTI ID:7069705
; ;  [1]
  1. Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins (USA)

We tested several hypotheses about the relationship of competition to abiotic stress, using the vegetation of the semiarid Piceance Basin of northwestern Colorado. We studied competition among the shrubs Amelanchier utahensis, Artemisia tridentata, and Symphoricarpos oreophilus, and between the trees Pinus edulis and Juniperus osteosperma, in 10 sites. We calculated several indices of abiotic moisture stress, based on the slope, aspect, and elevation of each site. Competition was measured by regressions of the distance separating neighboring plants vs. the sum of their canopy areas. We detected competition among these plants in all but one combination of species and in most sites. No significant differences in the intensity of competition were found within species combinations. Significant differences in the importance of competition were found in one of three interspecific combinations of shrub species, and in two of three combinations of tree species. Neither the intensity nor the importance of competition showed any consistent relationship with any index of abiotic moisture stress. Thus, no hypothesized relationship between abiotic stress and competition is supported. Our data also show no consistent relationship between the importance of competition and its intensity, supporting our hypothesis that the intensity and the importance of competition are independent.

OSTI ID:
7069705
Journal Information:
Ecology; (USA), Vol. 69:5; ISSN 0012-9658
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English