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Effect of enclosure on reproductive allocation of wheatgrass populations in desert steppes. | LitMetric

Plants generally adopt different reproductive strategies to adapt to their environments and increase their fitness. Here, we studied the effects of enclosure cultivation on the reproductive allocation of a wheatgrass species in the Desert steppes of Northern China. The results showed that: (a) after enclosure cultivation, the height, clump width, coverage, and clump biomass of significantly increased by 78.96% ( = .040), 63.50% ( = .013), 50.89% ( = .032), and 205.38% ( = .022), respectively, whereas density did not show a significant change ( = .330). (b) Enclosure cultivation significantly affected the biomass of . Compared with cultivation outside the fence, root, leaf, and spike biomass of inside the fence significantly increased by 183.52% ( = .020), 334.09% ( = .011), and 381.25% ( = .005), respectively. In addition, root biomass was the highest among the components (38.53 and 13.59 g inside and outside the fence, respectively) and spike biomass was the lowest (6.16 and 1.28 g inside and outside the fence, respectively). (c) Enclosure cultivation affected elemental nutrient allocation and the caloric values of various components of , and the caloric values are positively correlated with carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus contents. Enclosure cultivation significantly reduced carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus in the roots, as well as nitrogen and phosphorus in the spikes, but significantly increased nitrogen in the spikes by 9.78%. The caloric values of inside and outside the fence in decreasing order were as follows: spikes > leaves > stems > roots. Comparison of cultivation effects between inside and outside the fence showed that the caloric values of the spikes and roots significantly increased by 0.92% and 1.60%, respectively, whereas those of the leaves significantly decreased by 0.70%. Our results demonstrate that the reproductive allocation of elemental nutrients and caloric values in nonreproductive and reproductive organs are plastic to arid environments.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6953548PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5839DOI Listing

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