Abstract

Competitive relationships were estimated for plants from young and old pasture populations. Experimental treatments were conducted under both common garden field station conditions and actual grazed pasture conditions. The results suggest four conclusions. (1) Grazing and other ‘pasture’ conditions did not prevent plant competition. (2) Interspecific competition appears to promote the use of different resources (niche divergence). (3) Intraspecific competition may lead to a broadening of resource use by a species and, thus, indirectly increase both niche overlap and interspecific competition. No evidence was found to support an alternative theory of co-existence in which interspecific competition is argued to promote a balancing of competitive abilities without changes to relative niche overlap. (4) Changes in resource use appears to occur within a few decades after pasture formation.

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