Abstract
A three-year study involving 1300 marked shrubs of three species differing in palatability to sheep provided evidence that changes in the demographic structure of shrub populations in arid rangelands are a function of seed availability. Sheep reduced canopy size and flowering of their preferred forage species but had no effect on survivorship of seedlings or established plants during the study. Although annual turnover in all populations was low (<6%), abundant recent recruitment of non-forage species was observed on degraded rangeland. Natality of all three species was positively correlated with flower abundance. Mortality was correlated with natality because seedlings had a low probability of surviving their first year. Recruitment of both forage and non-forage species, appeared to be inhibited by competition and seedlings seldom survived near adult plants of the same growth form.
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