Skip to main content

Occurrence of Four Major Perennial Grasses in Relation to Edaphic Factors in a Pristine Community

Citation

Kimball T Harper, and Edgar F Kleiner, Occurrence of Four Major Perennial Grasses in Relation to Edaphic Factors in a Pristine Community: .

Summary

The ecology and phytosociology of a virgin grassland community (Virginia Park, Canyonlands National Park, Utah) have been investigated. Based on the use of C × F index, Hilaria jamesii and Stipa comata are the most abundant of the four major perennial grasses. Oryzopsis hymenoides and Sporobolus cryptandrus are less abundant in decreasing order. The sites dominated by Hilaria are characterized by soils with finer texture, slightly warmer average temperature and higher surface K+ and organic matter compared to sites dominated by Stipa comata. In addition, frequency of both vascular and cryptogamic species is greater on sites dominated by Hilaria. Published in Journal of Range Management, volume 30, issue 4, on pages 286 - 289, in 1977.

Contacts

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

metadata.xml 1.36 KB text/plain

Communities

  • Upper Colorado River Basin

Tags

Provenance

From Source - Mendeley RIS export <br> On - Tue May 10 11:35:22 CDT 2011

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
Title Citation Occurrence of Four Major Perennial Grasses in Relation to Edaphic Factors in a Pristine Community

Citation Extension

citationTypeMendeley
noteNotes
tableOfContentsTable of Contents

Item Actions

View Item as ...

Save Item as ...

View Item...