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Soil morphology and organic matter dynamics under cheatgrass and sagebrush-steppe plant communities
Authors:Jay B. Norton    Thomas A. Monaco    Jeanette M. Norton    Douglas A. Johnson   Thomas A. Jones
Affiliation:a Department of Plants, Soils, & Biometeorology, Utah State University, Logan, UT 84322-4820, USA;b USDA-ARS Forage and Range Research Laboratory, 695 N. 1100 E., Logan, UT 84322-6300, USA
Abstract:Widespread cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum L.) invasion represents a major shift in species dominance that may alter ecosystem processes across much of the western US. To investigate differences following such conversion, soil morphology and organic matter under cheatgrass-dominated and native shrub-steppe vegetation were compared by standard soil analysis procedures at seven paired sites in Idaho and Utah. Results suggest that, following conversion to cheatgrass dominance, increased porosity and labile organic inputs enhance microbial decomposition in near-surface horizons beneath cheatgrass compared to adjacent soils under native vegetation. Enhanced decomposition could result in depletion of long-term SOM, leading to impoverished sites difficult to restore to native perennial vegetation.
Keywords:Author Keywords: Cheatgrass   Bromus tectorum L.   Wyoming big sagebrush   Artemisia tridentata ssp. wyomingensis Beetle &   A.W. Young   Soil morphology   Soil organic matter   Invasive weeds   Sagebrush-steppe plant community
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