- Tallgrass prairie
The tallgrass prairie is an
ecosystem native to centralNorth America , with fire as its primary periodic disturbance. In the past, tallgrassprairie s covered a large portion of the AmericanMidwest , just east of theGreat Plains , and portions of theCanadian Prairies . They flourished in areas with richloess soils and moderate rainfall of around 30 to 35 inches (760 to 890 mm) per year. To the east were the fire-maintained eastern savannas. In the northeast, where fire was infrequent and periodic blowdown represented the main source of disturbance,beech -maple forests dominated.Shortgrass prairie was typical in the western Great Plains, where rainfall is less frequent and soils are less fertile.Ecosystem
As its name suggests, the most obvious features of the tallgrass prairie are tall
grass es such asbig bluestem andindiangrass , which average between 5 and 6 feet (1.5 and 2 m) tall, with occasional stalks as high as 8 or 9 feet (2.5 or 3 m). Prairies also include a large percentage offorb s, such aslead plant , Prairie Rosinweed ("Silphium terebinthinaceum"), andconeflower s.The tallgrass prairie
biome depends upon prairie fires, a form ofwildfire , for its survival and renewal.Citation | last =Klinkenborg | first =Verlyn | title =Splendor of the Grass: The Prairie's Grip is Unbroken in the Flint Hills of Kansas | journal =National Geographic | date =April 2007 | url = http://www7.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0704/feature5/ ] Tree seedlings and intrusivealien species without fire-tolerance are eliminated by periodic fires. Such fires may either be set by humans (for example, Native Americans used fires to drive buffalo and improve hunting, travel, and visibility) or started naturally by lightning. Attempts to re-establish small sections of tallgrass prairie inarboretum fashion were unsuccessful untilcontrolled burn s were instituted.Technically, prairies have less than 5-11% tree cover. A grass-dominated plant community with 10-49% tree cover is a
savanna .Due to accumulation of loess and organic matter, parts of the North American tallgrass prairie had the deepest
topsoil ever recorded. After the steel plow was invented byJohn Deere , this fertile soil became one of America's most important resources. Over 99% of the original tallgrass prairie is nowfarm land.Remnants
The tallgrass prairie survives in areas unsuited to plowing: the rocky hill country of the
Flint Hills , which run north to south through east-centralKansas , the eastern fringe of the Red River Valley (Tallgrass Aspen Parkland ) in Manitoba and Minnesota, theCoteau des Prairies which extends from South Dakota through Minnesota and intoIowa , and the far north portion ofOklahoma . In Oklahoma the tallgrass prairie was maintained by ranchers, who saw the hat-high grass as primegrazing area forcattle .A 39,000 acre (158 km²)
Tallgrass Prairie Preserve inOsage County, Oklahoma , and a somewhat smaller 10,894 acre (44 km²)Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in Kansas, attempt to maintain this ecosystem in its natural form, and have reintroduced bison to the vast expanses of waving grass.Other U.S. preserves include
Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie in Illinois, Broken Kettle Preserve andNeal Smith National Wildlife Refuge inIowa ,Konza Prairie in Kansas, andPrairie State Park in Missouri.The original extent of Tallgrass Prairie in Canada was the 6,000 square kilometre plain in the
Red River Valley , southwest ofWinnipeg inManitoba ("see" [http://www.mb.ec.gc.ca/nature/whp/prgrass/df03s56.en.html map] ). While most of Manitoba's tallgrass prairie has been destroyed through agricultural development, relatively small areas persist. One of the largest blocks of remaining tallgrass prairie in Manitoba is protected by several conservation partners in a conservation area called theTallgrass Aspen Parkland . The Manitoba Tall Grass Prairie Preserve, in the Rural Municipality of Stuartburn, Manitoba, forms a part of the Tallgrass Aspen Parkland. This preserve protects contains about 4000 hectares (10,000 acres) of tallgrass prairie, aspen parkland and wetlands.In eastern North Dakota is
Sheyenne National Grassland , the only National Grassland on the tallgrass prairie.There is a small pocket (less than 5 square km) of Tallgrass Prairie in the southwest corner of
Windsor, Ontario , protected byOjibway Park , and Spring Garden ANSI (Area of Natural Scientific Interest), along with the inter-connected parks:Black Oak Heritage Park ,Ojibway Prairie Provincial Nature Reserve and theTallgrass Prairie Heritage Park , all operated by the City of Windsor's Parks and Recreation, aside from the Provincial Nature Reserve.Restoration
The
Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie , founded in 1996 nearElwood, Illinois , was as of 2006 the largest tallgrass prairie restoration area in the United States.In Minnesota,
Glacial Ridge National Wildlife Refuge was established in 2004. The core of the refuge is a preserved convert|5000|acre|km2|0 tallgrass prairie remnant, and an additional convert|30000|acre|km2|0 are either in the process of restoration or will be soon. According toThe Nature Conservancy , so far 100 wetlands have been restored and convert|8000|acre|km2|0 of land have been seeded with native plant species. [The Nature Conservancy. [http://www.nature.org/wherewework/northamerica/states/minnesota/preserves/art6943.html Glacial Ridge Project] . www.nature.org. Retrieved on:November 14 ,2007 .]ee also
*
Buffalo commons
*Shortgrass prairie
* [http://www.tallgrassontario.org Tallgrass Ontario]Notes
References
* Manning, Richard. "Grassland: The History, Biology, Politics and Promise of the American Prairie"
* Cushman, Ruth Carol. "Peterson Field Guides: The North American Prairie" (Peterson Guides)
* Least Heat-Moon, William. "PrairyErth (A Deep Map): An Epic History of the Tallgrass Prairie Country"
* Savage, Candace. "Prairie: A Natural History"
* White, Matt. "Prairie Time: A Blackland Portrait"
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