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N Deposition, Invasive Species and Impacts on Biodiversity in Southern California Edith B. Allen Department of Botany and Plant Sciences University of California, Riverside
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Four major vegetation types are subject to N deposition in southern California Coastal sage scrub and desert scrub are subject to vegetation type conversion by exotic annual grasses. Mixed coniferous forest and chaparral are relatively stable.
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Levels of increasing N deposition required to increase invasive species and fire frequency in different vegetation types
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What are critical loads for N deposition that promote vegetation type conversion in coastal sage scrub (28-35 cm precipitation, 30 kg ha -1 yr -1 N deposition) vs. Mojave desert scrub ( 8 kg ha -1 yr -1 )?
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Soil N gradient from north to south in the Riverside-Perris Plain
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Box Springs Mt. with high N deposition dominated by exotic annual grasses Lopez Canyon with low N deposition dominated by native forbs and shrubs
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% cover and biomass of grasses following the 1993 fire and N fertilization (60 kg/ha/yr). The threshold for fire is 0.5-1.0 t/ha of fine grass fuel.
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% cover of exotic and native forbs following the 1993 fire and N fertilization.
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Air pollution at Key’s View, JOTR Dec. 04 Schismus barbata and Brassica tournefortii invasion at Snow Creek following fire
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Exotic grass biomass following two years of N fertilization at four sites at Joshua Tree National Park, 2004
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Elevated exotic grass biomass above the threshold value of 0.5-1.0 T/ha is most likely responsible for the high incidence of fire in the areas of CSS affected by N deposition. Even in the absence of fire, after a decade of N deposition at 60 kg/ha/yr exotic grasses increased and native species declined. In arid regions N will accumulate in soil, so critical loads are determined by a combination of time X level of N inputs.
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Number of plant species in each lifeform in 3 ha plots at seven sites along a N deposition gradient with varying concentrations of soil N (mg/kg)
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