Small‐scale barriers mitigate desertification processes and enhance plant recruitment in a degraded semiarid grassland

Abstract Anthropogenic desertification is a problem that plagues drylands globally; however, the factors which maintain degraded states are often unclear. In Canyonlands National Park on the Colorado Plateau of southeastern Utah, many degraded grasslands have not recovered structure and function >...

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Main Authors: Stephen E. Fick, Cheryl Decker, Michael C. Duniway, Mark E. Miller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2016-06-01
Series:Ecosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.1354
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spelling doaj-7c45adde734347a2bb4a02fbe0cfa5ee2020-11-25T01:41:21ZengWileyEcosphere2150-89252016-06-0176n/an/a10.1002/ecs2.1354Small‐scale barriers mitigate desertification processes and enhance plant recruitment in a degraded semiarid grasslandStephen E. Fick0Cheryl Decker1Michael C. Duniway2Mark E. Miller3Department of Plant Sciences University of California Davis California 95616 USANational Park Service North Cascades Complex Sedro‐Woolley Washington 98284 USAU.S. Geological Survey Southwest Biological Science Center Moab Utah 84532 USANational Park Service Southeast Utah Group Moab Utah 84532 USAAbstract Anthropogenic desertification is a problem that plagues drylands globally; however, the factors which maintain degraded states are often unclear. In Canyonlands National Park on the Colorado Plateau of southeastern Utah, many degraded grasslands have not recovered structure and function >40 yr after release from livestock grazing pressure, necessitating active restoration. We hypothesized that multiple factors contribute to the persistent degraded state, including lack of seed availability, surficial soil‐hydrological properties, and high levels of spatial connectivity (lack of perennial vegetation and other surface structure to retain water, litter, seed, and sediment). In combination with seeding and surface raking treatments, we tested the effect of small barrier structures (“ConMods”) designed to disrupt the loss of litter, seed and sediment in degraded soil patches within the park. Grass establishment was highest when all treatments (structures, seed addition, and soil disturbance) were combined, but only in the second year after installation, following favorable climatic conditions. We suggest that multiple limiting factors were ameliorated by treatments, including seed limitation and microsite availability, seed removal by harvester ants, and stressful abiotic conditions. Higher densities of grass seedlings on the north and east sides of barrier structures following the summer months suggest that structures may have functioned as artificial “nurse‐plants”, sheltering seedlings from wind and radiation as well as accumulating wind‐blown resources. Barrier structures increased the establishment of both native perennial grasses and exotic annuals, although there were species‐specific differences in mortality related to spatial distribution of seedlings within barrier structures. The unique success of all treatments combined, and even then only under favorable climatic conditions and in certain soil patches, highlights that restoration success (and potentially, natural regeneration) often is contingent on many interacting factors.https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.1354aeolian processesColorado Plateauconmodsconnectivitycontingencydrylands
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stephen E. Fick
Cheryl Decker
Michael C. Duniway
Mark E. Miller
spellingShingle Stephen E. Fick
Cheryl Decker
Michael C. Duniway
Mark E. Miller
Small‐scale barriers mitigate desertification processes and enhance plant recruitment in a degraded semiarid grassland
Ecosphere
aeolian processes
Colorado Plateau
conmods
connectivity
contingency
drylands
author_facet Stephen E. Fick
Cheryl Decker
Michael C. Duniway
Mark E. Miller
author_sort Stephen E. Fick
title Small‐scale barriers mitigate desertification processes and enhance plant recruitment in a degraded semiarid grassland
title_short Small‐scale barriers mitigate desertification processes and enhance plant recruitment in a degraded semiarid grassland
title_full Small‐scale barriers mitigate desertification processes and enhance plant recruitment in a degraded semiarid grassland
title_fullStr Small‐scale barriers mitigate desertification processes and enhance plant recruitment in a degraded semiarid grassland
title_full_unstemmed Small‐scale barriers mitigate desertification processes and enhance plant recruitment in a degraded semiarid grassland
title_sort small‐scale barriers mitigate desertification processes and enhance plant recruitment in a degraded semiarid grassland
publisher Wiley
series Ecosphere
issn 2150-8925
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Abstract Anthropogenic desertification is a problem that plagues drylands globally; however, the factors which maintain degraded states are often unclear. In Canyonlands National Park on the Colorado Plateau of southeastern Utah, many degraded grasslands have not recovered structure and function >40 yr after release from livestock grazing pressure, necessitating active restoration. We hypothesized that multiple factors contribute to the persistent degraded state, including lack of seed availability, surficial soil‐hydrological properties, and high levels of spatial connectivity (lack of perennial vegetation and other surface structure to retain water, litter, seed, and sediment). In combination with seeding and surface raking treatments, we tested the effect of small barrier structures (“ConMods”) designed to disrupt the loss of litter, seed and sediment in degraded soil patches within the park. Grass establishment was highest when all treatments (structures, seed addition, and soil disturbance) were combined, but only in the second year after installation, following favorable climatic conditions. We suggest that multiple limiting factors were ameliorated by treatments, including seed limitation and microsite availability, seed removal by harvester ants, and stressful abiotic conditions. Higher densities of grass seedlings on the north and east sides of barrier structures following the summer months suggest that structures may have functioned as artificial “nurse‐plants”, sheltering seedlings from wind and radiation as well as accumulating wind‐blown resources. Barrier structures increased the establishment of both native perennial grasses and exotic annuals, although there were species‐specific differences in mortality related to spatial distribution of seedlings within barrier structures. The unique success of all treatments combined, and even then only under favorable climatic conditions and in certain soil patches, highlights that restoration success (and potentially, natural regeneration) often is contingent on many interacting factors.
topic aeolian processes
Colorado Plateau
conmods
connectivity
contingency
drylands
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.1354
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AT markemiller smallscalebarriersmitigatedesertificationprocessesandenhanceplantrecruitmentinadegradedsemiaridgrassland
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