Abstract

AbstractThe initial development of a piosphere created by stocking a new watering trough with ca. 200 sheep at a near‐pristine site in arid chenopod shrubland near Whyalla, South Australia, was studied. The following variables were monitored for up to 8 years using fenced plots as controls:shrub mortality; forage biomass and defoliation of the dominant shrubs and short‐lived grasses; linear dimensions of Rhagodia ulicina; the density of short‐lived species; and the invasion of exotics. Patterns in these variables were looked for which reflected the attenuation of stocking pressure with distance from water; that is, ‘piosphere patterns’. Piosphere patterns were detected for many variables. Those with values increasing towards the trough were mortality of the main forage shrub Atriplex vesicaria. the density of three short‐lived taxa, viz. the bassias (Sclerolaena obliquicuspis, S. patenticuspis. Maireana sclerolaenoides), Tetragonia tetragonoides, and annual Zygophyllum spp. (Z. crenatum. Z. ovatum), and growth of short‐lived grass species when sheep stocking pressure was low. Variables with values decreasing towards the trough were grass biomass, percentage of A. vesicaria individuals in flower, the percentage foliation of A. vesicaria and of the forage shrub Maireana sedifolia, and shrub forage biomass of A. vesicaria and M. sedifolia.The rate at which these patterns were registered varied. After only 3 months, a piosphere pattern was evident for grass biomass. Marrubium vulgare, an introduced weed, invaded the trough site within the first 6 months. Almost no A. vesicaria shrubs had died after 2 years, but after 8 years there was a marked piosphere pattern in their mortality. The piosphere patterns in forage biomass and defoliation of A. vesicaria and M. sedifolia became more pronounced with time.Some variables did not exhibit a piosphere pattern, such as the dimensions of the shrub R. ulicina and the densities of successive cohorts of the forb Erodium spp., even though there was an overall effect of grazing in reducing their values. There was no mortality of two dominant shrubs, M. sedifolia and R. ulicina, during the first 8 years.

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