Elymus elymoides (squirreltail) and E. wawawaiensis
(bluebunch or Snake River wheatgrass) are two native
grasses used for revegetation in sagebrush steppe
regions of the western USA. Elymus elymoides is thought to be a more ruderal
species. We examined reproductive and
growth traits of these two species related to ruderal
versus competitive or stress-tolerant life histories. We tested effects of initial size of the
target plant at the start of the experiment, and competition from neighbor grasses
on Relative Growth Rate (RGR; final weight / initial weight) and Reproductive
Effort (RE; reproductive weight / vegetative weight) of these two species. In semiarid central Utah, we established one m2 plots
with ranges of densities of mature E. elymoides and E. wawawaiensis using plots from a previous
experiment. We also seeded a range of
densities of the introduced annual, Bromus tectorum on these plots. In March 2004, we measured ramet number and height of E. elymoides and E. wawawaiensis neighbors and target
plants, from which we calculated initial biomass per plant, and we counted B. tectorum seedlings
per plot. We clipped end-of-season
biomass of target plants in July 2004, clipping reproductive and vegetative
biomass separately. Elymus elymoides had higher RE than E. wawawaiensis
(means of 0.41 versus 0.07), and RE of E.
elymoides increased quickly with increasing
initial plant size, suggesting a ruderal species,
while RE of E. wawawaiensis
increased only slightly (marginally significant) and gradually with increasing
initial size. RE of E. elymoides decreased with increasing
competition, but competition did not significantly affect RE of E. wawawaiensis. For both species, RGR decreased with
increasing initial size, and with competition.