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AOBPreview published online on July 26, 2005

Annals of Botany, doi:10.1093/aob/mci230
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© The Author 2005. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Annals of Botany Company. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oupjournals.org
Received December 20, 2004
Revised February 7, 2005
Accepted June 1, 2005

Article

Competition for Nitrogen between Australian Native Grasses and the Introduced Weed Nassella trichotoma

WARWICK B. BADGERY 1*, DAVID R. KEMP 2, DAVID L. MICHALK 3, and WARREN M. C. G. KING 3

1 University of Sydney/Charles Sturt University, Rural Management, Leeds Pde, Orange, NSW 2800, Australia; Present address: NSW Department of Primary Industries, Orange Agricultural Institute, Forest Road, Orange, NSW 2800, Australia
2 University of Sydney/Charles Sturt University, Rural Management, Leeds Pde, Orange, NSW 2800, Australia
3 NSW Department of Primary Industries, Orange Agricultural Institute, Forest Road, Orange, NSW 2800, Australia

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
WARWICK B. BADGERY, E-mail: warwick.badgery{at}dpi.nsw.gov.au


  Abstract

Background and Aims Nassella trichotoma is an unpalatable perennial grass weed that invades disturbed native grasslands in temperate regions of south-eastern Australia. This experiment investigated whether elevated N levels, often associated with disturbance, increases the competitiveness of N. trichotoma relative to C3 and C4 native Australian grasses.

Methods A pot experiment investigated competitive interactions between four native grasses, two C3 species (Microlaena stipoides and Austrodanthonia racemosa) and two C4 species (Themeda australis and Bothriochloa macra), and N. trichotoma at three different N levels (equivalent to 0, 60 and 120 kg ha-1) and three competing densities (zero, one and eight neighbouring plants), using an additive design.

Key Results All native grasses were competitive with N. trichotoma at low N levels, but only M. stipoides was competitive at high N. High densities of native grasses (8 : 1) had a major competitive effect on N. trichotoma at all N levels. The competitive ranking of native grasses, across all N levels, on N. trichotoma was: M. stipoides > A. racemosa > B. macra > T. australis. The C3 species were generally more competitive than the C4 species and C4 grasses were not inherently more productive at low N levels, in contrast to the results of other studies.

Conclusion To resist invasion from N. trichotoma, these native grasses need to be maintained at a high density and/or biomass. The results do not support the theory that species such as N. trichotoma, with high tissues density, are always less competitive than those of low tissue density; in this case competitiveness depended on N levels. The ability of N. trichotoma to accumulate biomass at a higher rate than these native grasses, helps to explain why it is a major weed in disturbed Australian native grasslands.

Keywords: Australia, C3 and C4 competition, invasive species, Nassella trichotoma, native grasses, perennial grass weed, pot experiment, unpalatable grass.
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