Title: Seminars
1Seminars
- EECB seminar Thurs 400 PM OSN 120. Dr. Larry
Stevens, Grand Canyon Wildlands Council.
Biogeography of the Grand Canyon, and Colorado
River Management.
2Reading
- Textbook Chapter 12 and 13
- Sparrow, A., M. Friedel, and D. Tongway. 2003.
Degradation and recovery processes in arid
grazing lands of central Australia part 3
implications at landscape scale. Journal of Arid
environments 55 349-360.
3Outline
- Case study identifying communities and relating
to environmental conditions - Student case studies
- Productivity plants and ecosystems
- GPP, NPP, and Efficiency
- Global and environmental patterns of NPP
- Production in forest VS rangeland
- Factors influencing productivity fire,
herbivory, nutrient pulses, etc. - Climate change, CO2 accumulation, and carbon
sequestration
4Identification and interpretation of community
patterns
- Using classification (TWINSPAN) to identify wet
meadow communities - Relate community classification to environmental
(hydrologic and geomorphic) variables - Interpret impact of stream incision on vegetation
communities
5Humboldt-Toiyabe National ForestCentral
NevadaSan Juan Creek
Reese River
Birch Creek
6Reach-scale vegetation patterns
Below-fan Intermediate valley characteristics Woo
dy riparian, mesic dry meadows
Above-fan Broad valley bottom Wet meadows
At-fan Narrow valley bottom Woody riparian
and upland vegetation
7Objectives Hydrologic Component
- Determine the dominant vegetation types their
species associations within Kingston Meadow - Examine relationship of vegetation types to the
current hydrologic regime within Kingston Meadow - Evaluate any changes in vegetation associated
with a different hydrologic regime following
meadow restoration activities
8Sampling Scheme
- Determine the composition, ground cover, and
biomass of the vegetation associated with each
piezometer or nested well across a hydrologic
gradient within the meadow - 14 cross-valley transects (10 with
piezometers/wells 4 more to adequately sample
vegetation) - 55 sampling points (45 nested piezometers 10
additional sampling points) - 110 sample plots (2 subsamples per sampling
point)
9Terrace Height TWINSPAN
From unpublished data and Henderson, 2001 Stream
cross-sections
10Meadow GroundwaterCharacteristics
Meadow Type
From Linnerooth Chambers, 2000
11Vegetation Types- Hydrology Plots
Dominate Species Wetland Status Present in Geomorphic Plots
Carex rostrata Carex rostrata OBL
Carex nebrascensis Carex nebrascensis OBL ?
Mesic Graminiod Poa pratensis Juncus balticus FACU OBL ?
Dry/Planted Bromus inermis Cardex douglasii Agropyron cristatum NONE FACU NONE ?
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15Current System Dynamics
- Climate changes that occurred over 2000 years ago
are still influencing system dynamics - Recent incision began at the end of the Little
Ice Age about 290 years ago - The rate and magnitude has undoubtedly been
increased by human disturbance
16Stream Incision Causes
- Overgrazing in riparian zone and upland areas
within the watershed - Roads (crossings, captures)
- Sediment starvation due to long-term climate
effects
17Stream Incision Causes
Barrett Canyon
Corral Canyon
18Stream Incision Causes
- Overgrazing in riparian zone and upland areas
within the watershed - Roads (crossings, captures)
- Sediment starvation due to long-term climate
effects
19Stream Incision Consequences
- Lowers water table in the riparian zone
(threshold event) - Stream flow becomes isolated from former
floodplain - Development of inset terraces
- Invasion of more-xeric species
- Narrowing of riparian zone and loss of riparian
habitat
20Barley Cr. (Monitor Range)
San Juan Cr.
21Cottonwood Creek
1998
1994
22Gaining Systems
Non-Incised Meadow
Ground Surface
Water Table Surface
Incising Meadow
Ground Surface
Water Table Surface
Losing Systems
Ground Surface
Water Table Surface
23Your turn
- List management issues/projects you know of in
range and forest ecosystems. - Which of the ecological processes or interactions
we have discussed so far do you need to
understand? - Can you make predictions or recommendations based
on your understanding of the ecological systems?
24Productivity
- Energy captured by autotrophs.
- GPPtotal solar radiation fixed into chemical
energy via photosynthesis - NPPGPP-respiration
- Textbook Figure 12.1 energy pathways at primary
trophic level. Solar energy is reflected,
emitted, assimilated, respired, consumed by
herbivores, turned into detritus, or stored in
standing crop/biomass.
25Efficiency
- Proportion of energy converted into plant
material. Three components - Exploitation efficiency ability to intercept
light. GPP/solar radiation X 100. Affected by
LAI, leaf orientation, latitude, topographic
location. - Assimilation efficiency ability to convert
absorbed light into photosynthate. GPP/absorbed
radiation X 100. Affected by CO2 absorption,
temperature, light and water availability. - Net production efficiency capacity to convert
photosynthate into growth/reproduction rather
than respiration. NPP/GPP X 100. Depends on
temperature and amount of non-photosynthetic
biomass supported.
26Net Primary Production
- Difficult to measure accurately on large scale
because requires measures of photosynthetic and
respiration rates. - Usually use changes in biomass over time
- NPP (wt1- wt) D H
- Where (wt1- wt) is change in biomass over time
- D biomass lost to decomposition
- H biomass lost to herbivores
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28Net Primary Production
- Can also use allometric means changes in plant
size use regression to assess. - Allometry provides measure of root production
(mini-rhizotron images) - Global scale
- Models based on climate, precipitation,
evapotranspiration - Also remote sensing data
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30Carbon balance
- NPP-decomposition/loss to herbivores
- Essentially change in standing crop over time
- Important in assessing impact of vegetation on
CO2 emissions under Kyoto Protocol etc.
31Relationship of biomass to productivity
- BAR biomass accumulation ratio
- Ratio of dry weight biomass to annual NPP.
- Higher for plant communities with more long-lived
structure (woody plants)
Plant community BAR
Annual 1
Desert 2-10
Grassland 1.3-5
Shrubland 3-12
Forest 20-50
32Forest biomass and NPP
- Productivity often strongly related to soil
fertility or texture (eg N mineralization rate in
eastern US) - As community ages, ANPP changes
- Immediately following disturbance ANPP rapid and
biomass accumulates quickly - Maximum NPP and living biomass at 50-100 yrs
- Leaf biomass is maximal just before canopy
closure - Older forests have lower carbon balance
decomposition and respiration/maintenance of
nonphotosynthetic tissues
33Rangeland biomass and NPP
- Higher biomass not necessarily related to higher
NPP - In dense grasslands removal of dead or decadent
biomass may stimulate productivity - Indication of coevolution of herbivores and
grasses? Ability of grasses to re-grow
photosynthetic tissue after removal herbivore
tolerance - Grazing lawns rapid nutrient cycling and high
productivity caused by repeated grazing
34Factors affecting NPP
- Light, temperature
- Water (precipitation, evapotranspiration)
- Carbon dioxide (high concentrations more
influential for C3 than C4) - Nutrient availability (see handout and text P326)
- Herbivory can stimulate (by reducing
competition for light) or decrease (by removing
photosynthetic tissue) - Fire usually stimulates release of nutrients,
removal of competition for light and water
35Variable resources
- Resources are not constant in time or space
- Ecosystems are limited by a variety of resources
- Transient Maxima Hypothesis TMH
- Explains patterns of productivity for
non-equilibrium systems. - E.g. tallgrass prairie at equilibrium, light is
limiting (soil resources not utilized to maximum) - When disturbed, light not limiting, productivity
increases to utilize available resources (hence
increase in productivity with fire or herbivory)
36Global carbon cycle
- Atmospheric carbon flux strongly affected by
human activity - Combustion of fossil fuels and clearing of forest
releases sequestered carbon into atmosphere - Substantial changes in CO2 since industrial
revolution (from 280 ppm to gt350 ppm) - Productivity of vegetation affects CO2
concentration in atmosphere