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Centaurea Species: the Forb That Won the West
Authors:Katherine D Lejeune†‡  Timothy R Seastedt
Institution:Department of EPO Biology and Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research, 1560 30th Street, Campus Box 450, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309–0450, U.S.A.;Stratus Consulting Inc., P.O. Box 4059, Boulder, CO 80306–4059, U.S.A.
Abstract:Abstract: Grasslands of the western United States and Canada are being converted to ecosystems that resemble "old fields," dominated in terms of percent cover or biomass by forb species. In particular, five species of the genus Centaurea (star thistle, diffuse, spotted, squarrose, and Russian knapweed ) have invaded millions of hectares of western United States and Canadian grasslands. Centaurea species are fundamentally different from the preexisting dominant species and may exploit changes in resource availability to become established. We suspect that they then maintain dominance by preventing resources from returning to levels that favor the native species. Increased atmospheric nitrogen deposition, reduced fire frequency, and, possibly, direct and indirect fertilization resulting from cattle grazing appear to have reduced the historically strong nitrogen limitation to which native species of western grasslands are adapted. We suggest that the success of Centaurea species in dominating grasslands is explained by their ability to compete successfully for the new limiting resource or resources. Our preliminary evidence suggests that phosphorus limitation or a colimitation of phosphorus and water best explains the current dominance patterns.
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