Within‐Year Soil Legacies Contribute to Strong Priority Effects of Exotics on Native California Grassland Communities

Volume: 18, Issue: 5, Pages: 664 - 670
Published: Sep 1, 2010
Abstract
Understanding priority effects, in which one species in a habitat decreases the success of later species, may be essential for restoring native communities. Priority effects can operate in two ways: size‐asymmetric competition and creation of “soil legacies,” effects on soil that may last long after the competitive effect. We examined how these two types of priority effects, competition and soil legacies, drive interactions between seedlings of...
Paper Details
Title
Within‐Year Soil Legacies Contribute to Strong Priority Effects of Exotics on Native California Grassland Communities
Published Date
Sep 1, 2010
Volume
18
Issue
5
Pages
664 - 670
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