Presettlement Vegetation of Two Prairie Peninsula Counties

1979 ◽  
Vol 140 (2) ◽  
pp. 232-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cassandra S. Rodgers ◽  
Roger C. Anderson
1977 ◽  
Vol 55 (5) ◽  
pp. 593-605 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. M. Roberts ◽  
T. Robson ◽  
P. M. Catling

Plants of the prairie peninsula have persisted in southwestern Ontario in localized areas where a high water table in spring, severe drought in midsummer, and intermittent burning have limited forest encroachment. Unlike these relicts of the postglacial xerothermic period, a community of prairie species on a railway embankment at West Hill (Toronto) has developed within the last 100 years. It is postulated that the persistence of these prairie species in the face of intense competition by seedlings from the surrounding fields is due largely to their adaptation to the seasonal fluctuation of moisture availability, nutrient deficiency, and periodic disturbance at this site. Mortality of invading seedlings was due to extrinsic environmental stresses rather than competition for limited resources during the period of active growth. The perennial Liatris spicata was able to dominate part of the habitat as a result of rapid growth of adults and seedlings before drought, low requirement for nutrients and effective mobilization from the corm in spring, and resorption before senescence. Experimental trials suggest that accumulation of litter, improving the moisture-retention and nutrient availability of the substrate, will lead eventually to elimination of Liatris and the other disjunct species. The case for preserving this community and other wet-mesic prairies in southwestern Ontario is outlined. However, it is clear that the current practice of 'conservation by complete protection' should be replaced by a management policy of periodic burning or mowing.


1983 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 153-166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chelvadurai Manogaran
Keyword(s):  

1983 ◽  
Vol 109 (2) ◽  
pp. 355 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael P. Schafale ◽  
P. A. Harcombe

1974 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 487-495 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert V. Ruhe

In midwestern United States the most important widespread environmental event during the Holocene about 8000 y.a. was the establishment of an effective precipitation pattern that in part defines the Prairie Peninsula. The pattern occupies a region that is dominated by dry westerly air for 6–9 mo during normal years and for 9–12 mo during drought years. Regional soil geography correlates readily with zones of precipitation effectiveness with Brunizem (Udolls) conforming to the moist, subhumid zone, Chernozem (Boralls, Udolls) relating to the dry, subhumid zone, and Chestnut and Brown soils (Ustolls) fitting the semiarid zone. During the past few thousand years, a climatic reversal has caused encroachment of forest on prairie resulting in the formation of transitional or intergrade soils.In local areas the Holocene is expressed on the land surface by the soil geomorphic unit which is the repetitive occurrence of a sequence of soils on the erosional surface of a hillslope and on the correlative depositional body at the foot and toe of the slope. This unit embraces time, lithology, landscape, and soils and provides a means for mapping the Holocene on the countryside.


1973 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 329-382 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miron L. Heinselman

AbstractFire largely determined the composition and structure of the presettlement vegetation of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area as well as the vegetation mosaic on the landscape and the habitat patterns for wildlife. It also influenced nutrient cycles, and energy pathways, and helped maintain the diversity, productivity, and long-term stability of the ecosystem. Thus the whole ecosystem was fire-dependent.At least some overstory elements in virtually all forest stands still date from regeneration that followed one or more fires since 1595 A.D. The average interval between significant fire years was about 4 yr in presettlement times, but shortened to 2 yr from 1868 to 1910 during settlement. However, 83% of the area burned before the beginning of suppression programs resulted from just nine fire periods: 1894, 1875, 1863–1964, 1824, 1801, 1755–1959, 1727, 1692, 1681. The average interval between these major fire years was 26 yr. Most present virgin forests date from regeneration that followed fires in these years. Significant areas were also regenerated by fires in 1903, 1910, 1936, and 1971. Most major fire years occurred during prolonged summer droughts of subcontinental extent, such as those of 1864, 1910, and 1936. Many fires were man-caused, but lightning ignitions were also common. Lightning alone is probably a sufficient source of ignitions to guarantee that older stands burned before attaining climax. Dry matter accumulations, spruce budworm outbreaks, blowdowns, and other interactions related to time since fire increase the probability that old stands will burn. Vegetation patterns on the landscape were influenced by such natural firebreaks as lakes, streams, wetlands, and moist slopes. Red and white pine are most common on islands, and to the east, northeast, or southeast of such firebreaks. Jack pine, aspen-birch, and sprout hardwood forests are most common on large uplands distant from or west of such firebreaks.A Natural Fire Rotation of about 100 yr prevailed in presettlement times, but many red and white pine stands remained largely intact for 150–350 yr, and some jack pine and aspen-birch forests probably burned at intervals of 50 yr or less. There is paleoecological evidence that fire was an ecosystem factor before European man arrived, and even before early man migrated to North America. Probably few areas ever attained the postulated fir-spruce-cedar-birch climax in postglacial times. To understand the dynamics of fire-dependent ecosystems fire must be studied as an integral part of the system. The search for stable communities that might develop without fire is futile and avoids the real challenge of understanding nature on her own terms.To restore the natural ecosystem of the Canoe Area fire should soon be reintroduced through a program of prescribed fires and monitored lightning fires. Failing this, major unnatural, perhaps unpredictable, changes in the ecosystem will occur.


2012 ◽  
Vol 39 (1-6) ◽  
pp. 297-322
Author(s):  
Lauren E. Brown ◽  
Christopher A. Phillips

The examination of 387 preserved red-bellied snakes, Storeria occipitomaculata, from 18 museums and collections, literature records, and unpublished records revealed distributional records throughout much of Illinois, in contrast to earlier studies which found a more limited distribution. Seventy-one records of habitat types from museum records, field notes, and literature indicated that the species occupies woodlands but is not primarily forest adapted. It also inhabits prairie and prairielike habitats in Illinois. The common occurrence of this species in this type of habitat has not heretofore been reported elsewhere in the range of the snake. Our findings do not support an older zoogeographic theory that assumed the snake was nonadapted for prairie and thus excluded from the Prairie Peninsula. We propose that the species was able to occupy the area near the ice rim of the Wisconsin Episode glaciation, and followed the glaciation as it retreated because of the snake’s cold tolerance, ability to inhabit northern prairies and coniferous forests, vivipary which allows thermoregulation by gravid females, and the relatively temperate climate along the glacial rim. Within recent times, it seems likely that the snake was extirpated throughout much of the former prairie by destructive changes associated with agriculture.


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