Interactions
Elymus elymoides is a species that has very interesting
interactions with other species within the land plants and
animals kingdoms. This species can thrive in such harsh
conditions and even compete and most importantly win with
invasive species, making it have a restorative quality, which is
very important in any ecosystem today.
One of the major competitors in the land plants Kingdom that E.
elymoides encounters is
Bromus tectorum. This interaction
is widely studied because B. tectorum is an alien annual grass
that invades places where it can affect bottlebrush
squirreltail, but not drastically. Bromus causes the most
problems within this Elymus species when they are just young
seeds and the Bromus causes fatality within the seeds
because E. elymoides is not strong enough to resist the
invasion quite yet. However, if this Elymus species has matured then Bromus has
little to no effect on it (Humphrey and Schupp 2004). This
is because Elymus elymoides is capable of ecotypic variation
which provides it genotypes to resist invasion (Humphrey and
Schupp 2004).
Bottlebrush squirreltail is not always interacting with other organisms on a competitive scale, but it also acts as a food source. Many animals such as cattle, mule deer, horses, black tail jackrabbits, ground squirrels and sheep enjoy this as part of their year round diet in the fields (USDA 2006 and EOL 2013). Animals like bison and cattle also use it as a dietary component (EOL 2013). Other species that interact with E. elymoides can be seen on the back on the habitat and geography page.
Additionally, this species of Elymus is known for its amazing and useful qualities that help restore ecosystems. In particular, it serves as an early seral species that can successfully compete and win with invasive species and weeds to restore the land back to other native perennials (EOL 2013). This restoration can happen in any disturbed climate such as arid to semi-arid, desert shrub, and pinyon-juniper ecosystems (EOL 2013).
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