Title: Temperate%20Grasslands
1Temperate Grasslands
- Prairies, (N. Am. Great Plains, Palouse,
California) - Steppes (Russia - Ukraine Hungary-Rumania)
- Pampas (Argentina - Uruguay)
- Veldt (S. Africa) NZ tussock grasslands
2Temperate grasslands
prairies, steppes, pampas, veldt..
3Temperate grasslands
- Prairies and steppes have continental climates
characterised by large annual range of
temperature, cool - cold winters, with most of
precipitation as snow, and hot, commonly droughty
summers because of high evapotranspiration rates.
4North American grasslands
Calgary
Chicago
Cheyenne
Omaha
Abilene
5Palouse prairie
eastern Washington, and Oregon, Idaho
6California grasslands
7Classifying the American prairie
above Carpenter, 1940. below Clements and
Weaver, 1939.
8Mean annual temperature and precipitation in US
prairies
9Temperature regimes(Great Plains stations)
Temperature (C)
10Precipitation regimes(west- east transect)
11The prairie-forest boundary
- Budyko suggested that the forest - grassland
boundary in the midwest corresponds with a
dryness ratio of 1.1 -1.2 (dotted line)
Budyko dryness ratio values, N. America
Hare (1980) Atmos.-Ocean 18, 127-153.
12Pacific air mass dominance period (months of the
year)
9 months
lt1 month
12 months
lt1 month
13Soils
- Loessic parent material - derived from aeolian
reworking of glacial and fluvioglacial deposits
in northern North America and Europe during late
glacial periods. - Limited areas of glacial, fluvioglacial, and
alluvial deposits
14Soil genesis
- In humid areas on forest margins BRUNIZEMS are
the dominant soil type. Characterized by
moderately acid A horizon (pH 5-6). - In tall-grass prairies CHERNOZEMS (MOLLISOLS)
are dominant. A horizon has pH of about 6-7.
Dominant processes are melanization and
calcification. Rodent (esp. gopher) and insect
activity may recycle gt100 ton/ha/of soil per year
to surface.
15Chernozem/Mollisol profiles
mixed-grass short grass
Melanization
Calcification
16Soil mosaic in humid prairies (humic gleys in
hollows soil erosion on ridges)
17Soil catena in dry prairies
1. Chernozem
1
depression
2
3
Na, Mg, etc
2. Solonetz 3. Solod
textural B Na saturation of B and C horizons
Solonetzic solod profile
18Chernozem-solonetz mosaic in grazed steppe,
Rumania
S
C
S
S
S
19Some common grass species
1
2
3
4
1. Andropogon gerardii (big bluestem) 2.
Bouteloua curtipendula (sideoats grama) 3.
Schizachyrium scoparius (little bluestem) 4.
Koeleria macrantha (?) 5. Bouteloua gracilis
(blue grama)
5
20Grass-climate relations(highly schematic)
E. Illinois
W.Wyoming
2m tall
1m tall
0.5m tall
21Topography and plant cover mixed grass prairies
(ungrazed)
22Grass phenology
23Cardinal temperatures for net photosynthesis, C4
and C3 plants
24C4 grassesa) less tolerant of low temperatures
(e.g. flowering inhibited by night T lt13C) b)
more tolerant of moisture deficits
25 C4grasses in regional grass flora
10
20
30
40
50
60
80
70
26Polar and tropical source areas for prairie
grassesNote no pre-Miocene grass fossils known
from plains area. Conclusion Prairies
developed in lee of rising Cordillera in
mid-Tertiary.
C3 Agropyron, Elymus Koeleria, Poa, Stipa
sedges
Bouteloua, Buchloe Andropogon C4
27Prairie forbs
- Streletsk reports 180 spp of flowering plants
from the Ukrainian steppes (only 20 of which are
grasses). - In the tall-grass prairies of North America gt70
spp may be in flower at once. - Forbs have variable drought tolerances and
phenologies. - Flowering times range from March (e.g.
Tulipa/Hyacintha in steppes) - Sept/Oct (e.g.
Delphinium spp.).
28Some N. American prairie forbs
3
1
2
1. Amorpha canescens 2. Asclepias tuberosa 3.
Helenium autumnale 4. Verbena stricta 5. Aster
laevis
4
5
29Annual productionof plant biomass in prairie
grasslandsnote 60-80 below-ground
30Biomass(ungrazed prairie)
31Grazers
32Consumptionrelatively small intake by shoot
grazers vs. root suckers(predominantly
nematodes)BUT is this a product of historical
factors?
33Rapid decline in grazer populations in last 200
years as a result of habitat destruction and
hunting.
Buffalo - almost extinct Gophers - 98 decline
1900
34Buffalo grazing Manitoba
In vallies and humid situations, the grass grows
to a great height, which fattens our horses in a
short time, but the buffalo usually makes choice
of the hilly, dry ground to feed on, the blades
of grass on which are small, short and tender.
When a numerous herd of these animals stay any
length of time in one place, the ground is
absolutely barren there for the remainder of the
season Umfreville (1790)
35Buffalo grazing North Dakota
This afternoon I rode a few miles up Park river.
The few spots of wood along it have been ravaged
by buffaloes none but the large trees are
standing . . . The small wood and brush are
entirely destroyed, and even the grass is not
permitted to grow. The bare ground is more
trampled by these cattle than the gate of a
farmyard . . . Alexander Henry (1801)
36(No Transcript)
37 Was there a grazing sequence?
Antelope reported to follow buffalo they appear
to prefer heavily-grazed land with dense
populations of forbs.
Antilocapra americana
38Colonization of old coyote burrows by gophers -
effects of dogtown on neighbouring vegetation
10 m
pre-
post-
Eastern Colorado prairies burrow entrances shown
by arrows
39Effects of dogtown age on local plant cover
grassland replaced by herbaceous shubland
40Carnivores
(all hole nesters)
Burrowing owl Kit fox
Badger
swift fox, coyote, wolf, bears
Photo credits Greg Lasley, Bill Standley
41Pre-Pleistocene fauna
- Selection of prairie flora for tolerance of heavy
grazing a product of radiation of diverse
herbivore assemblage in Mio-Pliocene. - In the Pliocene the N. American plains were home
to 7 genera of horses, 12 genera of antelopes
camelids, peccaries, tapirs and rhinoceroses
(plus a diverse group of carnivores) - Think of a Nebraskan Serengeti.
42Pliocene plains fauna
43Fire on the prairies
Are the tall-grass prairies a climatic climax, or
is fire the predominant generative and
maintaining factor?
44The argument in favour of fire
I grew up in the timbered upland peninsula
formed by the junction of the Missouri and
Mississippi Rivers. The prairie began a few
miles to the north and extended far into Iowa.
The broad rolling uplands were prairie, whatever
their age and origin, the stream-cut slopes were
timbered.. From grandparents I heard of the
early days when people dared not build their
houses beyond the shelter of the wooded slopes,
until the plough stopped the autumnal prairie
fires. In later field work in Illinois, in the
Ozarks, in Kentucky, I met parallel conditions of
vegetation limits coincident with breaks in
relief. I gave up the search for climatic
explanation of the humid prairies. Carl Sauer,
1969. Agricultural Origins and Dispersals.
45A prairie landscape in Illinois,showing the
restriction of woodland to moister (and more
fire-proof) valley bottoms
46Prairie fires Texas
the Indians of the interior have another
intolerable method, . . . which is to fire the
plains and forests . . . both to drive the
mosquitoes away and at the same time drive
lizards and like things from the earth to eat.
They also kill deer by encircling fires deprived
of pasturage, the animals are forced to seek it
where the Indians may trap them. Cabeza de
Vaca, A.N. Relación (1542) Shipwrecked by a
hurricane on the coast of Texas with his crew in
1527 Cabeza de Vaca lived with the Indians in
Texas from 1528-1535.
47Prairie fires the Dakotas
the Plains are on fire in view of the fort on
both sides of the river, it is said to be common
for the Indians to burn the Plains near their
Villages every Spring for the benefit of their
horses and to induce the Buffalow to come near
them. Lewis and Clarks Journals - describing
their winter quarters in North Dakota in 1805.
48Prairie fires Oklahoma
Oct 31, 1832 It was the time when hunting
parties of Indians set fire to the prairies the
herbage . . . was in that parched state,
favorable to combustion . . . Irving, W.A. A
Tour on the Prairies (1835)
Oct. 24, 1849 yesterday we could see the
smoke of the Prairie burning in every direction
but today it got close to us. It was the work of
the Osages Woodhouse, S.W. Journals (1992)
49Fire and prairie restoration
Fire season Fire season
Spring Late-summer
Flame height (L, m) 1.90.4 0.70.1
Intensity (I kW/m)1 1260520 12020
Litter consumption () 100 912
II 259.83L2.174
Data Copeland et al., 2002. Restoration
Ecology, 10,31-323
50Fire and prairie restoration
Data Copeland et al., 2002. Restoration
Ecology, 10, 31-323
51Fire and prairie restoration
Data Copeland et al., 2002. Restoration
Ecology, 10, 31-323
52Prairies in the late Quaternary
PollenViewer
Where were the prairies at LGM? Most LGM pollen
assemblages in southern Great Plains have no
modern analogues, but Neb/Kansas open
subalpine forest/parkland? C.Texas sagebrush
steppe? northern Mexico-NM juniper/pinyon
woodland?
see Poaceae and prairie forbs
53Climatic change produces a shifting prairie -
forest ecotone(cf. Hypsithermal)
500 km
54Recent (and future?) climate change in the
prairies (Moon Lake, ND)
AD
Droughts
Wets