Persistence and expansion of ponderosa pine woodlands in the west-central Great Plains during the past two centuries
Corresponding Author
Margot W. Kaye
School of Forest Resources, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA
Correspondence: Margot W. Kaye, 303 Forest Resources Building, University Park, PA 16802, USA.E-mail: [email protected].Search for more papers by this authorConnie A. Woodhouse
School of Geography and Development, The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA
Search for more papers by this authorStephen T. Jackson
Department of Botany and Program in Ecology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071, USA
Search for more papers by this authorCorresponding Author
Margot W. Kaye
School of Forest Resources, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA
Correspondence: Margot W. Kaye, 303 Forest Resources Building, University Park, PA 16802, USA.E-mail: [email protected].Search for more papers by this authorConnie A. Woodhouse
School of Geography and Development, The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA
Search for more papers by this authorStephen T. Jackson
Department of Botany and Program in Ecology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071, USA
Search for more papers by this authorAbstract
Aim Woody plant expansion and infilling in grasslands and savannas are occurring across a broad range of ecosystems around the globe and are commonly attributed to fire suppression, livestock grazing, nutrient enrichment and/or climate variability. In the western Great Plains, ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) woodlands are expanding across broad geographical and environmental gradients. The objective of this study was to reconstruct the establishment of ponderosa pine in woodlands in the west-central Great Plains and to identify whether it was mediated by climate variability.
Location Our study took place in a 400-km wide region from the base of the Front Range Mountains (c. 105° W) to the central Great Plains (c. 100° W) and from Nebraska (43° N) to northern New Mexico (36° N), USA.
Methods Dates for establishment of ponderosa pine were reconstructed with tree rings in 11 woodland sites distributed across the longitudinal and latitudinal gradients of the study area. Temporal trends in decadal pine establishment were compared with summer Palmer Drought Severity Index (PDSI). Annual trends in pine establishment from 1985 to 2005 were compared with seasonal PDSI, temperature and moisture availability.
Results Establishment of ponderosa pine occurred in the study area in all but one decade (1770s) between the 1750s and the early 2000s, with over 35% of establishment in the region occurring after 1980. Pine establishment was highly variable among sites. Across the region, decadal pine establishment was persistently low from 1940 to 1960, when PDSI was below average. Annual pine establishment from 1985 to 2005 was positively correlated with summer PDSI and inversely correlated with minimum spring temperatures.
Main conclusions Most ponderosa pine woodlands pre-date widespread Euro-American settlement of the region around c. ad 1860 and currently have stable tree populations. High variability in the timing of establishment of pine among sites highlights the multiplicity of factors that can drive woodland dynamics, including land use, fire history, CO2 enrichment, tree population dynamics and climate. Since the 1840s, the influence of climate was most notable across the study area during the mid-20th century, when the establishment of pine was suppressed by two significant droughts. The past sensitivity of establishment of ponderosa pine to drought suggests that woodland expansion will be negatively affected by predicted increases in temperature and drought in the Great Plains.
References
-
Albertson, F.W. &
Weaver, J.E. (1944) Nature and degree of recovery of grassland from the great drought of 1933 to 1940.
Ecological Monographs, 14, 393–479.
10.2307/1948617 Google Scholar
- Allen, C.D. & Breshears, D.D. (1998) Drought-induced shift of a forest-woodland ecotone: rapid landscape response to climate variation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, 95, 14839–14842.
- Alward, R.D., Detling, J.K. & Milchunas, D.G. (1999) Grassland vegetation changes and nocturnal global warming. Science, 283, 229–231.
- Applequist, M.B. (1958) A simple pith locator for use with off-center increment cores. Journal of Forestry, 56, 141.
- Archer, S., Schimel, D.S. & Holland, E.A. (1995) Mechanisms of shrubland expansion: land use, climate, or CO2? Climatic Change, 29, 91–99.
- Binkley, D., Moore, M.M., Romme, W.H. & Brown, P.M. (2006) Was Aldo Leopold right about the Kaibab deer herd? Ecosystems, 9, 1432–1435.
- Bradley, B.A. & Fleishman, E. (2008) Relationships between expanding pinyon–juniper cover and topography in the central Great Basin, Nevada. Journal of Biogeography, 35, 951–964.
- Breshears, D.D., Cobb, N.S., Rich, R.M., Allen, C.D., Balice, R.G., Romme, W.H., Kasten, J.H., Floyd, M.L., Belnap, J., Myers, O.B. & Meyerd, C.W. (2005) Regional vegetation die-off in response to global-change-type drought. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, 102, 15144–15148.
- Breshears, D.D., Myers, O.B., Meyer, C.W., Barnes, F.J., Zou, C.B., Allen, C.D., McDowell, N.G. & Pockman, W.T. (2009) Tree die-off in response to global change-type drought: mortality insights from a decade of plant water potential measurements. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 7, 185–189.
- Briffa, K.R., Jones, P.D., Bartholin, T.S., Eckstein, D., Schweingruber, F.H., Karlé, W., Zetterberg, P. & Eronen, M. (1992) Fennoscandian summers from ad 500: temperature changes on short and long timescales. Climate Dynamics, 7, 111–119.
- Briggs, M.J., Hock, G.A. & Johnson, L.C. (2002) Assessing the rate, mechanisms, and consequences of the conversion of tallgrass prairie to Juniperus virginiana forest. Ecosystems, 5, 578–586.
- Brown, P.M. & Seig, C.H. (1999) Historical variability in fire at the ponderosa pine – Northern Great Plains prairie ecotone, southeastern Black Hills, South Dakota. Écoscience, 6, 539–547.
- Browning, D.M., Archer, S.R., Asner, G.P., McClaran, M.P. & Wessman, C.A. (2008) Woody plans in the grasslands: post-encroachment stand dynamics. Ecological Applications, 18, 928–944.
- Burke, I.C., Kittel, T.G.F., Lauenroth, W.K., Snook, P., Yonker, C.M. & Parton, W.J. (1991) Regional analysis of the Central Great Plains: sensitivity to climate variability. BioScience, 41, 685–692.
- Campbell, B.D. & Stafford Smith, D.M. (2000) A synthesis of recent global change research on pasture and range production: reduced uncertainties and their management implications. Agriculture, Ecosystems, and the Environment, 82, 39–55.
- Chapman, R.N., Engle, D.M., Masters, R.E. & Leslie, D.M., Jr (2004) Tree invasion constrains the influence of herbaceous structure in grassland bird habitats. Écoscience, 11, 55–63.
- Clark, J.S., Grimm, E.C., Donovan, J.J., Fritz, S.C., Engstrom, D.R. & Almendinger, J.E. (2002) Drought cycles and landscape responses to past aridity on prairies of the northern Great Plains, USA. Ecology, 83, 595–601.
-
Clements, F.E. (1916) Plant succession: an analysis of the development of vegetation. Carnegie Institute of Washington Publication 242. Carnegie Institute of Washington, Washington, DC.
10.5962/bhl.title.56234 Google Scholar
- Cook, E.R., Woodhouse, C.A., Eakin, C.M., Meko, D.M. & Stahle, D.W. (2004) Long-term aridity changes in the western United States. Science, 306, 1015–1018.
- Cook, E.R. et al. (2008) North American summer PDSI reconstructions, Version 2a. IGBP PAGES/World Data Center for Paleoclimatology Data Contribution Series No. 2008-046. NOAA/NGDC Paleoclimatology Program, Boulder, CO.
- Covington, W.W., Fulé, P.Z., Moore, M.M., Hart, S.C., Kolb, T.E., Mast, J.N., Sackett, S.S. & Wagner, M.R. (1997) Restoration of ecosystem health in southwestern ponderosa pine forests. Journal of Forestry, 95, 23–29.
- Daly, C., Halbleib, M., Smith, J.I., Gibson, W.P., Doggett, M.K., Taylor, G.H., Curtis, J. & Pasteris, P.A. (2008) Physiographically-sensitive mapping of temperature and precipitation across the conterminous United States. International Journal of Climatology, 28, 2031–2064.
- Davis, M.B. & Shaw, R.G. (2001) Range shifts and adaptive responses to Quaternary climate change. Science, 292, 673–679.
- Fensham, R.J., Fairfax, R.J. & Archer, S.R. (2005) Rainfall, land use and woody vegetation cover change in semi-arid Australian savanna. Journal of Ecology, 93, 596–606.
- Forman, S.L., Oglesby, R. & Webb, R.S. (2001) Temporal and spatial patterns of Holocene dune activity on the Great Plains of North America: megadroughts and climate links. Global and Planetary Change, 29, 1–29.
- Forman, S.L., Marin, L., Pierson, J. & Gomez, J. (2005) Aeolian sand depositional records from western Nebraska: landscape response to droughts in the past 1500 years. The Holocene, 15, 973–981.
- Fye, F.K., Stahle, D.W. & Cook, E.R. (2003) Paleoclimatic analogs to twentieth-century moisture regimes across the United States. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 84, 901–909.
- Gray, S.T., Betancourt, J.L., Jackson, S.T. & Eddy, R.G. (2006) Role of multidecadal climatic variability in a range extension of pinyon pine. Ecology, 87, 1124–1130.
- Greenwood, D.L. & Weisberg, P.J. (2009) GIS-based modeling of pinyon–juniper woodland structure in the Great Basin. Forest Science, 55, 1–12.
- Gutmann, M.P. (2005) Great Plains population and environment data: demographic and social data [Computer file]. ICPSR version. University of Michigan and Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research, Ann Arbor, MI.
- Hart, R.H. & Hart, J.A. (1997) Rangelands of the Great Plains before European settlement. Rangelands, 19, 4–11.
- Hicke, J.A., Sherriff, R.M., Veblen, T.T. & Asner, G.P. (2004) Carbon accumulation in Colorado ponderosa pine stands estimated with dendrochronology. Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 34, 1283–1295.
- Houghton, R.A., Hackler, J.L. & Lawrence, J.T. (1999) The U.S. carbon budget: contributions from land-use change. Science, 285, 574–578.
- Hughes, R.F., Archer, S., Asner, G.P., Wessman, C.A., McMurty, C. & Nelson, J. (2006) Changes in aboveground primary production and carbon and nitrogen pools accompanying woody plant encroachment in a temperate savanna. Global Change Biology, 12, 1733–1747.
- IPCC (2007) Climate change 2007: the physical science basis. Summary for policy makers. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Secretariat, Geneva.
- Iverson Nassauer, J. (1995) Culture and changing landscape structure. Landscape Ecology, 10, 229–237.
-
Jackson, S.T. &
Overpeck, J.T. (2000) Responses of plant populations and communities to environmental changes of the late Quaternary.
Paleobiology, 26(Suppl.), 194–220.
10.1666/0094-8373(2000)26[194:ROPPAC]2.0.CO;2 Google Scholar
- Jackson, S.T., Betancourt, J.L., Booth, R.K. & Gray, S.T. (2009) Ecology and the ratchet of events: climate variability, niche dimensions, and species distributions. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, 106, 19685–19692.
- Knapp, A.K., Briggs, J.M., Collins, S.L., Archer, S.R., Syndonia Bret-Harte, M., Ewers, B.E., Peters, D.P., Young, D.R., Shaver, G.R., Pendall, E. & Cleary, M.B. (2007) Shrub encroachment in North American grasslands: shifts in growth form dominance rapidly alters control of ecosystem carbon inputs. Global Change Biology, 14, 615–623.
- Kuchler, A.W. (1964) Potential natural vegetation of the conterminous United States. American Geographical Society Special Publication No. 36. American Geographical Society, New York.
- League, K. & Veblen, T.T. (2006) Climatic variability and episodic Pinus ponderosa establishment along the forest-grassland ectones of Colorado. Forest Ecology and Management, 228, 98–107.
- van Mantgem, P.J., Stephenson, N.L., Byrne, J.C., Daniels, L.D., Franklin, J.F., Fulé, P.Z., Harmon, M.E., Larson, A.J., Smith, J.M., Taylor, A.H. & Veblen, T.T. (2009) Widespread increase of tree mortality rates in the western United States. Science, 323, 521–524.
- Mariotti, A. & Peterschmitt, E. (1994) Forest savanna ecotone dynamics in India as revealed by carbon isotope ratios of soil organic matter. Oecologia, 97, 475–480.
- Mast, J.N., Veblen, T.T. & Linhart, Y.B. (1998) Disturbance and climate influences on age structure of ponderosa pine at the pine/grassland ecotone, Colorado Front Range. Journal of Biogeography, 25, 743–755.
- Meko, D. (1992) Dendroclimatic evidence from the Great Plains of the United States. Climate since A.D. 1500 (ed. by R.S. Bradley and P.D. Jones), pp. 312–330. Routledge, London.
- Miller, R.F. & Wigand, P.E. (1994) Holocene changes in semiarid pinyon–juniper woodlands. BioScience, 44, 465–474.
- Moleele, N.M. & Perkins, J.S. (1998) Encroaching woody plant species and boreholes: is cattle density the main driving factor in the Olifants Drift communal grazing lands, south-eastern Botswana? Journal of Arid Environments, 40, 245–253.
- Ojima, D., Gutmann, M.P. & Parton, W.J. (2007) Long-term trends in population, farm income, and crop production in the Great Plains. BioScience, 57, 737–747.
- Ojima, D.S., Lackett, J.M. & the Central Great Plains Steering Committee and Assessment Team (2002) Preparing for a changing climate: the potential consequences of climate variability and change – central Great Plains. Report for the US Global Change Research Program. Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO.
- Omernik, J.M. (1987) Ecoregions of the conterminous United States. Map (scale 1:7,500,000). Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 77, 118–125.
- Pacala, S.W., Hurtt, G.C., Baker, D. et al. (2001) Consistent land- and atmosphere-based U.S. carbon sink estimates. Science, 292, 2316–2320.
- Palmer, W.C. (1965) Meteorological drought. Department of Commerce Research Paper No. 45. Department of Commerce, Washington, DC.
- Parton, W.J., Gutmann, M.P., Williams, S.A., Easter, M. & Ojima, D. (2005) Ecological impact of historical land-use patterns in the Great Plains: a methodological assessment. Ecological Applications, 15, 1915–1928.
- Pearson, G.A. (1950) Management of ponderosa pine in the Southwest. US Department of Agriculture Agricultural Monograph No. 6. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.
- PRISM Climate Group (2009) PRISM climate group. Oregon State University, Oregon, OR. Available at: http://www.prismclimate.org (accessed May 2009).
- Reich, P.B. & Oleksyn, J. (2008) Climate warming will reduce growth and survival of Scots pine except in the far north. Ecology Letters, 11, 588–597.
- Richardson, D.M. & Bond, W.J. (1991) Determinants of plant distribution: evidence from pine invasion. The American Naturalist, 137, 639–668.
- Ricketts, T.H., Dinerstein, E., Olson, D.M., Loucks, J.C. et al. (1999) Terrestrial ecoregions of North America: a conservation assessment. Island Press, Washington, DC.
- Robbins, W.W. & Dodds, G.S. (1908) Studies in mesa and foothill vegetation I, 3. Distribution of conifers on the mesas. University of Colorado Studies, 6, 31–36.
- Rosenstock, S.S. & Van Riper, C., III (2001) Breeding bird responses to juniper woodland expansion. Journal of Range Management, 54, 226–232.
- le Roux, P.C. & McGeoch, M.A. (2008) Rapid range expansion and community reorganization in response to warming. Global Change Biology, 14, 2950–2962.
- Sala, O.E., Parton, W.J., Joyce, L.A. & Lauenroth, W.K. (1988) Primary production of the central grassland region of the United States. Ecology, 69, 40–45.
- Savage, M., Brown, P.M. & Feddema, J. (1996) The role of climate in a pine forest regeneration pulse in the southwestern United States. Écoscience, 3, 310–318.
- Scheintaub, M.R., Derner, J.D., Kelly, E.F. & Knapp, A.K. (2009) Response of the shortgrass steppe plant community to fire. Journal of Arid Environments, 73, 1136–1143.
-
Shantz, H.L. (1906) A study of the vegetation of the mesa region east of Pike’s Peak: the Bouteloua formation II. Development of the formation.
Botanical Gazette, 42, 179–207.
10.1086/328960 Google Scholar
- Silva, J.F., Xambrano, A. & Fariñas, M. (2001) Increase in woody component of seasonal savannas under different fire regimes in Calabozo, Venezuela. Journal of Biogeography, 28, 977–983.
- Sims, P.L. & Risser, P.G. (1999) Grasslands. North American terrestrial vegetation (ed. by G.M. Barbour and W.D. Billings), pp. 323–356. Cambridge University Press, New York.
- Soulé, P.T. & Knapp, P.A. (1999) Western juniper expansion on adjacent disturbed and near-relict sites. Journal of Range Management, 52, 525–533.
- Soulé, P.T. & Knapp, P.A. (2006) Radial growth rate increases in naturally occurring ponderosa pine trees: a late-20th century CO2 fertilization effect? New Phytologist, 171, 379–390.
- Stahle, D.W., Fye, F.K. & Therrell, M.D. (2004) Interannual to decadal climate and streamflow variability estimated from tree rings. The Quaternary period in the United States (ed. by A.R. Gillespie, S.C. Porter and B.F. Atwater), pp. 491–504. Elsevier, Amsterdam.
- Steinauer, E.M. & Bragg, T.B. (1987) Ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) invasion of Nebraska Sandhills Prairie. The American Midland Naturalist, 118, 358–365.
- Stokes, M.A. & Smiley, T.L. (1996) An introduction to tree-ring dating. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL.
- Svatek Ziegler, S., Larson, E.R., Rauchfuss, J. & Elliott, G.P. (2008) Tree establishment during dry spells at an oak savanna in Minnesota. Tree-Ring Research, 64, 47–54.
- Swetnam, T.W. & Betancourt, J.L. (1998) Mesoscale disturbance and ecological response to decadal climatic variability in the American Southwest. Journal of Climate, 11, 3128–3147.
- Swetnam, T.W., Allen, C.D. & Betancourt, J.L. (1999) Applied historical ecology: using the past to manage for the future. Ecological Applications, 9, 1189–1206.
- Tolstead, W.L. (1947) Woodlands in northwestern Nebraska. Ecology, 28, 180–188.
- Van Auken, O.W. (2000) Shrub invasions of North American semiarid grasslands. Annual Review of Ecological Systems, 31, 197–215.
- Veblen, T.T. (1992) Regeneration dynamics. Plant succession: theory and prediction (ed. by D.C. Glenn-Lewin, R.K. Peet and T.T. Veblen), pp. 153–187. Chapman and Hall, New York.
- Walker, R.F., Johnson, D.W., Geisinger, D.R. & Ball, J.T. (2000) Growth, nutrition, and water relations of ponderosa pine in a field soil as influenced by long-term exposure to elevated atmospheric CO2. Forest Ecology and Management, 137, 1–11.
- Walther, G., Post, E., Convey, P., Menzel, A., Permesan, C., Beebee, T.J.C., Fromentin, J., Hoegh-Guldberg, O. & Bairlein, F. (2002) Ecological responses to recent climate change. Nature, 416, 389–395.
- Wells, P.V. (1965) Scarp woodlands, transported grassland soils, and concept of grassland climate in the Great Plains region. Science, 148, 246–249.
- Wells, P.V. (1970) Postglacial vegetational history of the Great Plains. Science, 167, 1574–1582.
- Wessman, C.A., Archer, S., Johnson, L.C. & Asner, G.P. (2004) Woodland expansion in US grasslands. Land change science: observing, monitoring, and understanding trajectories of change on the earth’s surface (ed. by G. Gutman, A.C. Janetos, C.O. Justice, E.F. Moran, J.F. Mustard, R.R. Rindfuss, D. Skole, B.L. Turner and M.A. Cochrane), pp. 185–208. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Norwell, MA.
- West, E. (1995) The way to the West. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, NM.
-
Whitfield, C.J. (1933) The vegetation of Pike’s Peak region.
Ecological Monographs, 3, 75–105.
10.2307/1943032 Google Scholar
- Woodhouse, C.A. & Brown, P.M. (2001) Tree-ring evidence for Great Plains drought. Tree-Ring Research, 57, 89–103.
- Woodhouse, C.A. & Overpeck, J.T. (1998) 2000 years of drought variability in the central United States. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 79, 2693–2714.
- Woodhouse, C.A., Lukas, J.J. & Brown, P.M. (2002) Drought in the western Great Plains, 1845–56: impacts and implications. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 83, 1485–1493.
- Youta Happi, J. (1998) Arbres contre graminées: la lente invasion de la savane par la forêt au Centre Cameroun. Doctoral dissertation, Universite du Paris-Sorbonne UFR Geographie et Emanegement, Paris.