1976
DOI: 10.2307/1935039
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Moisture Relationships in Twelve Northern Desert Shrub Communities Near Grand Junction, Colorado

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Cited by 69 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…Furthermore, the relatively small change in soil texture in the top 50 cm of soil indicates that moisture in the deeper soil layers plays a key role in annual and forb plant performance in these systems, as Hammerlynck et al (2002) found in their work. We note that evapotranspiration is positively associated with vegetation cover (Branson et al 1976). Therefore, greater vegetation cover and associated competition for water off dunes cannot be ruled out as additional factors associated with lower attained plant C off dunes.…”
Section: Plant and Soil Water Relationsmentioning
confidence: 73%
“…Furthermore, the relatively small change in soil texture in the top 50 cm of soil indicates that moisture in the deeper soil layers plays a key role in annual and forb plant performance in these systems, as Hammerlynck et al (2002) found in their work. We note that evapotranspiration is positively associated with vegetation cover (Branson et al 1976). Therefore, greater vegetation cover and associated competition for water off dunes cannot be ruled out as additional factors associated with lower attained plant C off dunes.…”
Section: Plant and Soil Water Relationsmentioning
confidence: 73%
“…In contrast, the other sites are located closer to the floodplain, and thus roots likely have access to supplemental water, which could account for the overall lack of decline with increasing temperature. Sarcobatus vermiculatus was expected to be less sensitive to temperature than A. tridentata because it is a phreatophyte well adapted to hot desert regions and because it can drop leaves in the summer (Branson et al 1976). In contrast, A. tridentata has a low photosynthetic temperature optima and is at v www.esajournals.org the southern end of its distribution on the Colorado Plateau (Caldwell 1985).…”
Section: Shrublandsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is some support for the wilting point values (h w ), which are the lowest matric potentials at which plant water withdrawal becomes zero. Sagebrush was reported to operate in soils with potentials as low as -7.0 MPa (Fernandez and Caldwell 1975;Branson et al 1976). Cline et al (1977) showed that cheatgrass could remove water at potentials as low as -1.5 MPa.…”
Section: C12mentioning
confidence: 99%