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Saturday, November 22, 2008 - 7:45 PM
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire . It took less than a century after John Deere unveiled his
steel-bladed plow in 1837 for the North American prairie to all but
disappear. For 20 million years, a nearly 1,000-mile-wide swath of
unbroken grassland belted the continent's midsection from northern
Canada to Mexico. Now, only about 5 percent is left, mainly as mixed
and shortgrass prairie in the Plains states. To the east, less than 1
percent of the original lush tallgrass remains, most of it as remnants
in pioneer cemeteries and old railroad rights-of-way. http://louis6j6sheehan.blogspot.com
Plowed up,
paved over, and little lamented, the vanishing prairie found few early
champions. Among them were naturalists Aldo Leopold and John Curtis,
who began using Civilian Conservation Corps enlistees in the 1930s to
help restore more than 110 acres at the University of Wisconsin–Madison
Arboretum. One of the earliest attempts at habitat restoration, the
site today has hundreds of species of native plants, birds, and small
mammals. http://louis6j6sheehan.blogspot.com
Now, prairie restoration is attracting widespread
interest among environmental scientists, conservation groups, and even
the U.S. government. The first federal grassland preserve, Midewin
National Tallgrass Prairie, opened 3 years ago on the grounds of the
former Joliet Army Ammunition Plant near Chicago. Thousands of ordinary
midwesterners are also rediscovering their long-spurned heritage,
working to preserve or restore patches of prairie in fallow cornfields,
quarter-acre backyard plots, and an expanding network of preserves.
How-to Web sites instruct landowners in restoration techniques, and
seed companies specializing in prairie species are thriving. Prairies
now rank among the most popular ecosystems targeted for restoration
anywhere, especially the tallgrass of the Midwest's eastern third. But
researchers are left wondering how well the prairie renaissance is
really succeeding and whether it's actually possible to re-create a
prairie. Until recently, little long-term monitoring had quantified the
success rates of common restoration techniques, and few studies had
compared even the most careful restorations with scarce remnant prairie
habitat. Broad-scale comparisons are complicated by the fact that
restorations serve a range of different purposes. Beyond bringing back
native plants, some restorations focus on conserving fresh water or
creating habitat for birds. About 40 percent of North American bird
species are native to prairie. Because restoring prairies is both
labor- and cost-intensive, some restorations are seeded with only a
fraction of the plants that a remnant prairie holds. Seed mixes usually
contain relatively few species and some of those species are difficult
to grow from seed. Measuring success YARDSTICK
OF REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS. Wild indigo's height in an Indiana restoration
yields comparisons to remnant prairie for researcher Deborah Marr.A. Schnabal Real
prairies are highly diverse. "In a remnant prairie, you can find 150 to
180 species of plants," says Deborah Marr, a plant ecologist at Indiana
University in Bloomington. In western Indiana, Marr and her colleagues
have been comparing restored prairie with slices of the original in
nature preserves and along railway rights-of-way. Across the board, the
remnants have more native-plant species. Over a 4-year study period,
plant diversity increased in the restored prairies, but the proportion
of grasses and flowering broad-leaved plants diverged from that found
in remnant prairies. A study during the 1990s of sites around the
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Batavia, Ill., where
restoration efforts began in 1975, also found that species richness
declined over time in restored sites, but not in remnants. The Fermi
restorations had never achieved the biodiversity of remnants to begin
with. High diversity, a Holy Grail to prairie ecologists, so far eludes
their restorations, but no one is sure why. "A remnant is very
complex," notes Marr. Blazing wildflowers and rippling bluestems only
hint at the complexity below ground. "It takes a long time for soils to
build up," she adds. Unlike cropland, prairie soils are rich in fungi,
which appear to be an essential component of high diversity. In August,
at a conference in San Jose, Calif., Indiana University researcher
Peggy Schultz reported on field trials that suggest that adding soil
from prairie remnants, or at least inoculating restorations with the
kind of fungi found in remnants, can allow hard-to-establish plants to
take hold. http://louis6j6sheehan.blogspot.com
Seed selectionsObtaining the variety
of seed needed to start a restoration can be an arduous, months-long
task involving painstaking hand picking by squads of volunteers. As a
result, many restorations rely on mail-order seeds that typically
include grass cultivars or wildflowers from various sources. The grass
cultivars were originally bred by the U.S. Department of Agriculture to
hold topsoil in place. They are now planted on millions of acres as
part of the USDA's Conservation Reserve Program, which pays farmers to
plant erosion-taming native grasses on land removed from agriculture. In
the late 1990s, though, plant biologist Sara Baer, then a graduate
student at Kansas State University in Manhattan, began noticing
something unexpected while doing research at the 3,487-hectare Konza
Prairie Biological Station in northeastern Kansas, part of the largest
remnant tallgrass prairie in North America. The grass cultivars in her
sites were germinating readily and growing fast and tall. In some
situations, that would be desirable, but here, the robust grasses were
crowding out slower-growing native flowering plants and disrupting the
balance of species. Productivity was easy to restore in the prairie;
diversity much less so. http://louis6j6sheehan.blogspot.com
At around the same time, plant ecologist
David Gibson and his students at Southern Illinois University
Carbondale (SIUC) began finding major genetic differences between
cultivars and wild seeds. Their photosynthesis rates also differed.
Furthermore, genetic differences existed between local and nonlocal
wild seed.  RESTORED TO THE RANGE. Bison promote biodiversity by grazing on new grasses but ignoring tender forbs.iStockphoto Since
then, some prairie enthusiasts, passionate about making restorations as
faithful to the original undisturbed prairie as possible, have begun
avoiding mail-order seed mixes, instead hand gathering wild seed only
within 200 miles of their site. Gibson cautions that little research
supports any particular approach. With a 5-year grant from the
National Science Foundation, Gibson and Baer (now also at SIUC) hope to
tease out some guiding principles for restorations. At three sites in
Kansas and Illinois, the scientists are planting wild seeds and
cultivars of prairie grasses and wildflowers in multiple plots and in
various proportions. "No one has ever put the same plant species, but
from different seed sources, in a common environment before," says Baer. Cultivated
seed will make up from 4 percent to 97 percent of each plot's mix. The
idea, says Baer, is to see whether tinkering with proportions can help
establish and maintain a truly diverse prairie. Burning questions"Production
of prairie seeds is a big business, and there are all these species
that people can choose to put in," Baer says. "Restorations are unique,
in that by our decisions, we humans are an integral filter." Historically,
bison grazing and fire were the two natural filters that shaped and
maintained the prairie. Until they were nearly extirpated in the 19th
century, along with the prairie itself, bison by the tens of millions
ranged across North American grasslands, often in herds so big that
observers compared them to roaring avalanches. Fires, set by lightning
strikes and later by Native Americans, would attract bison and other
herbivores, because the burned patches sprouted fresh green grasses
that the animals prefer to graze on. At the same time, bison avoided
the tender broad-leaved plants, or forbs. This kind of preferential
grazing established a system of checks and balances, which kept grasses
under control and allowed many plant species to flourish. Researchers
at Kansas' Konza Prairie and elsewhere have begun to see how bison
encourage habitat diversity by grazing very heavily on burned patches
and avoiding other areas altogether. Heavily disturbed habitats, for
example, attract some native birds. Other native birds prefer
completely undisturbed habitats; and still others, such as prairie
chickens, require a mix of habitats. The same holds true for insects
and small mammals. Over time, fire drove the bison's behavior,
which in turn shaped the prairie's biodiversity. But fire by itself is
not enough to restore diversity to the prairie, says ecologist Scott
Collins of the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. Various studies
by Collins and his colleagues have shown that frequent burning by
itself can reduce biodiversity. Collins' work at Konza shows that
species diversity rises in areas that are grazed and infrequently
burned, and falls in frequently burned, ungrazed areas. "Diversity is
much higher at all levels in the grazed areas," he says. "If I
had a prairie to restore," says Collins, "my recommendation would be
that some kind of grazing, or at least mowing, to eliminate the big,
thick grass canopy and create more light, take place." Studies by other
researchers indicate that bison and other native herbivores like to eat
many nonnative, exotic plants, which helps suppress the invasions that
plague grasslands. Deron Burkepile of Yale University, who
studies native herbivores in North American and South African
grasslands, says, "I think that grazing is essential for restoration.
More and more people are starting to adapt that mind-set." Those
findings are borne out by the sight of newly installed bison herds
silhouetted against the sky at a growing number of prairie preserves.
Still, little is known, even now, about eons-old grazing patterns and
fire frequencies. If annual burning causes plant diversity to fall,
then how often should controlled burns occur? Studies indicate that
burning every 4 years probably isn't frequent enough to keep out trees
and woody shrubs. Adapting to the futureIronically,
figuring out historical fire frequency at Konza may not be relevant
today, says Collins. Human-driven environmental change imposes new
conditions on prairies that could make restoration more challenging
than ever. Already, encroachment by nonnative shrubs, bushes, and other
woody plants is afflicting grasslands around the world, with or without
controlled burning. And the past itself is a moving target,
points out Alan Knapp, a plant ecologist at Colorado State University
in Fort Collins who is also doing studies at Konza Prairie. "We have a
romantic, snapshot view of the prairie when Europeans settled it," he
says. "But ecological systems are always dynamic, always changing." Prairies
evolved under blazing summers, harsh winters, and extreme fluctuations
of temperature and rainfall from year to year and within growing
seasons. To adapt, prairie plants developed underground-storage
structures and extensive root systems. Scientists have recently
discovered that prairie species grow more variably from year to year,
depending on rainfall variations, than do plants in any other North
American biome. That variability makes remnant prairies, such as Konza,
good natural laboratories for studying the likely effects of future
climate change. Most climate models predict extreme and variable
rainfall patterns and future temperature increases. To study those
hypothetical effects, scientists at Konza Prairie are manipulating
rainfall and temperature under canopied shelters where native prairie
grasses, such as big bluestem and Indian grass, grow. Altering the
timing of rainfall from current norms can lead to significant declines
in the plants' productivity. "It's surprising how rapid the changes
have been," says researcher Melinda Smith of Yale University. In
a new, related study at Konza Prairie, Smith is profiling the genetic
activity of two grasses under simulated climate-change conditions. Some
regulatory genes may become less active when the grasses are stressed
by alterations in precipitation. Smith and colleagues hope to identify
specific genetic changes linked to the plants' responses to
environmental changes. That should, in turn, reveal implications for
large-scale ecosystem processes. One early surprise is the large
amount of genetic diversity that already exists within populations of
native dominant species. "You can find 14 genotypes of big bluestem in
1 square meter," says Smith. "Diversity within dominant species is
often ignored." Tapping that genetic diversity may in time offer
the best shot for keeping grasslands vibrant under future conditions
that will be vastly different from those of today. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire .
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