New Zealand Journal of Botany abstracts
Effect of artificial defoliation of mid-ribbed snow tussock, Chionochloa pallens, in the Murchison Mountains, Fiordland, New Zealand
W. G. LEE
Botany Division
DSIR
Private Bag
Dunedin, New Zealand
J. A. MILLS
Science and Research Directorate
Department of Conservation
P. O. Box 10420
Wellington, New Zealand
R. B. LAVERS
Formerly with Wildlife Service
Department of Internal Affairs
Private Bag
Te Anau, New Zealand
Abstract Biomass, tillering, and plant chemistry
were measured in tussocks of Chionochloa pallens
in low-alpine snow tussock grassland in Fiordland in
April 1986, eight years after severe clipping in
spring, 1977. Clipping increased tiller density, but
depressed tiller size and total tussock biomass.
Defoliated tussocks responded by decreasing the
proportion of total biomass and mineral nutrients
allocated to roots, and losing a greater percentage of
these resources in leaf senescence. Total non-
structural carbohydrate allocation, primarily sucrose
and starch, is also significantly reduced in the stems
of clipped tussocks. The many severe effects of a
single defoliation on Chionochloa pallens tussocks
and their slow rate of recovery suggests that it will be
two decades, even in the absence of grazing, before
they recover fully.
Keywords tussock grassland; Chionochloa
pallens; grazing; biomass; nutrients; carbohydrates;
Fiordland; New Zealand
Received 10 September 1987; accepted 5 April 1988
New Zealand Journal of Botany, 1988, Vol. 26: 511-523
0028-825X/88/2604-0511S2.50/0 © Crown copyright 1988
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (900K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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