Top Banner
Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems
42
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems

Page 2: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.
Page 3: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Primary Production

• Grasses occur in two basic forms - sod (or turf) grasses form a thick mat - bermuda grass, blue grass

• bunch grasses grow in distinct clumps - little bluestem, prairie dropseed

• sod grasses usually grow vegetatively with short rhizomes, stolons or runners and are very effective in resisting water or wind erosion

• bunch grasses reproduce vegetatively by tillers - shoots which arise from the crown - basal portion of plant, atop the roots - may have up to 100 or more tillers in a single clump of grasses like little bluestem

Page 4: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Sod grass vs. bunch grass

Page 5: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.
Page 6: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Grass Tillers

Page 7: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Grass Tillers in a Sod Grass

Page 8: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Grass Rhizomes

Page 9: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Rhizomes and Tillers Stabilizing Soil

Page 10: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Primary Production

• Gross primary production (GPP) is the total amount of energy fixed by a plant or plant community

• Net primary production - is the amount of energy stored or biomass produced - it is GPP minus energy burned in respiration

• NPP = GPP - R

Page 11: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Ecosystem Production

• Gross Ecosystem Production (GEP) - is total energy fixed in ecosystem

• Net ecosystem production (NEP) is total amount of energy stored or biomass produced by all organisms in ecosystem - producers, consumers, decomposers - or GEP - ecosystem respiration (ER) the respiration of all plants, consumers and decomposers

• NEP = GEP - ER

Page 12: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Photosynthesis

Page 13: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Prairie Productivity

• Estimates of production of aboveground biomass range from 200 to 570 grams of carbon per square meter per year for a tallgrass prairie

Page 14: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.
Page 15: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.
Page 16: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Prairie Productivity

• In prairies 2 to 4 times the amount of aboveground biomass occurs as biomass below ground

• Prairie plants produce extensive root systems - big bluestem roots reach down 2 m; switchgrass roots reach down 3.7 m; forbs such as leadplant and dotted gayfeather have much deeper roots - reaching down 5 m

• A student of Weaver's measured the length of root material in the top 10 cm of a 0.5 square meter plot and found 21.5 km of big bluestem root; 38.7 km of little bluestem; 18.3 km of needlegrass; 176.7 km of Kentucky bluegrass

Page 17: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Prairie Productivity cont’d

• For most praire plants, 80% of the root biomass occurs in the top 25 cm of soil

• Further complicating the picture is that many grasses reproduce by rhizomes - the rhizomes anchor the plant, take up some water and nutrients, store food, and produce aerial shoots - rhizomes usually occur in the top 10 to 20 cm of the soil

Page 18: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Prairie Productivity

• In prairies belowground biomass of 685 to 1900 g C per square meter per year

• Thus total yearly production in tallgrass prairies combining aboveground and belowground biomass appears in the 800 to 2400 g C per square meter per year range

• This is in comparison to 3500 g C per square meter for an Iowa cornfield

Page 19: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Influence of grazing

Page 20: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

East African Grasslands

Page 21: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Grazing in East Africa

Page 22: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Compensatory Growth

• Grazing seems to stimulate plants to engage in compensatory growth (to replace lost plant material) and to reallocate resources within the plant

• Compensatory growth may occur due to enhanced photosynthesis; more efficient light use due to reductions in mutual shading; hormonal changes causing an increase in tillering; leaf cell division and leaf cell expansion; reduced rate of leaf senscence; nutrient recycling accompanying herbivory (excretion releases nutrients); some stimulatory effect of herbivore saliva (this idea about cow slobber is very controversial)

Page 23: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Grazing in Illinois Prairies

Illinois tallgrass prairie plants vary in response to grazing - ability to withstand grazing depends upon several factors:

1. possession of rhizomes2. capacity for production of lateral shoots3. small height and erectness of growth habit4. lateness of seed germination and spring growth5. slow growth rate6. lateness of elevation of stem apex above

minimum point of grazing

Page 24: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Decline with Grazing

Indian grass Willow aster

Page 25: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Increase with Grazing

Sideoats grama Common Yarrow

Page 26: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Highly invasive after grazing

Downy Brome (cheatgrass) Canada Thistle

Page 27: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Eastern Meadowlark DickcisselIncrease with moderate grazing

Page 28: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Grasshopper sparrow –Only found in grazed areas

Page 29: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Savannah sparrow Declines with grazing

Page 30: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

LeConte’s Sparrow BobolinkUnaffected by grazing

Page 31: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Decline with grazing

Prairie Vole Short-tailed shrew

Page 32: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Unaffected by grazing

Thirteen-lined ground squirrel White-footed deer mouse

Page 33: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Influence of Fire

Page 34: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.
Page 35: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Native American Fires

Meadows Burning by George Caitlin - 1832

Page 36: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.
Page 37: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.
Page 38: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Decline with spring fires

Kentucky Bluegrass Bicknell’s Sedge

Page 39: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Increase with spring fires

Canada Wild Rye Prairie Dropseed

Page 40: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Fire Effects

• If fire is followed by adequate precipitation, biomass production will increase in the next 2 to 3 years following the fire; if precipitation is less than adequate, biomass production will decrease

• Species richness of plants usually increases in burned compared to unburned areas - species richness also increases when fire is combined with grazing - so fire and grazing both act to limit growth by competitive dominants and allow competitively inferior species to increase

Page 41: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Increase with fire -Prairie Grasshoppers

Page 42: Illinois Plant Communities – Prairie Ecosystems.

Decrease with fire

Beetles Leafhoppers