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Gender-related differences of shrubs in stands of Atriplex canescens with different histories of grazing by cattle
Authors:Andres F Cibils  David M Swift  Richard H Hart
Institution:a Rangeland Ecosystem Science Department and Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, 80523, U.S.A.;b USDA-ARS High Plains Grasslands Research Station, Cheyenne, WY, 82009, U.S.A.
Abstract:Atriplex canescens is a relatively common dioecious shrub in western North America. It is considered a valuable forage resource for both wild and domestic herbivores. Sex ratios and shrub dimensions were recorded in stands of tetraploid A. canescens that had been either protected from cattle grazing or summer- or winter-grazed by cattle for at least 20 years. Stem diameter and crown shape were used as surrogates for shrub age which could not be estimated by counting growth rings. Shrub sex ratios in exclosures were significantly more female biased than the empirically derived ratio for tetraploid A. canescens (55 female:35 male: 10 monecious). Conversely, shrub sex ratios in grazed pastures were not significantly different from the empirical ratio. Proportion of female shrubs in exclosures was significantly higher than in grazed pastures. Proportion of male shrubs, on the other hand, was similar in exclosures and grazed pastures. Winter-grazed shrub stands were apparently younger than both summer-grazed and protected shrubs. Protected shrubs appeared to be the oldest. Grazed female shrubs were apparently younger than grazed males, however, shrub ages of protected male and female shrubs were apparently not different. Cattle-grazing may have affected female shrubs more negatively at this site, causing gender-based differential mortality, and/or sex-shifting. Such processes could account for the differences in sex ratios, and for the apparent gender-related differences in shrub age that were observed.
Keywords:Atriplex canescens  shrub sex ratios  shrub ages  cattle grazing
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