The Changing Forests of Central Oklahoma: A Look at the Composition of the Cross Timbers Prior to Euro-American Settlement, in the 1950's, and Today

Richard E. Thomas, B. Hoagland
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Prior to Euro-American settlement, the Cross Timbers of the Southern Plains marked the edge of “civilization,” beyond which lay a prairie ecosystem ruled primarily by Plains Indian tribes. War, trade, and pasture for cattle brought an increased Euro-American presence by the middle of the 19th century. In the early 1870s a large portion of what was to become the state of Oklahoma was surveyed by the General Land Office (GLO). Although these surveys were not conducted for ecological purposes, they have provided information on pre-settlement vegetation that has been  invaluable for researchers seeking to reconstruct the historical landscape. Perhaps the most beneficial information for historical ecologists and  biogeographers comes from data on bearing trees recorded by GLO  surveyors, which have given present-day researchers a good idea of the species composition of Cross Timbers forests during this time. When  compared to modern studies of the Cross Timbers, it documents a change in species composition over time, believed to be the result of fire suppression and perhaps the beginning of a wetter climate cycle. In central Oklahoma, this has meant a shift from forests dominated by Quercus marilandica and Quercus stellata (with the former being more abundant) to forests containing an equal abundance of these two species, and an  increase in Carya texana, Juniperus virginiana, and other mesophytic and invasive woody species.
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俄克拉何马州中部的森林变化:在欧美人定居之前,在1950年代和今天的十字架木材组成的观察
在欧美人定居之前,南部平原的十字木标志着“文明”的边缘,在它之外是主要由平原印第安部落统治的草原生态系统。到19世纪中叶,战争、贸易和养牛的牧场带来了越来越多的欧美人。在19世纪70年代早期,俄克拉何马州的大部分土地由土地总署(GLO)进行了调查。虽然这些调查不是为了生态目的而进行的,但它们提供了关于定居前植被的信息,这对寻求重建历史景观的研究人员来说是非常宝贵的。也许对历史上的生态学家和生物地理学家最有益的信息来自于GLO测量员记录的有果树的数据,这些数据使当今的研究人员对这一时期的交叉木材森林的物种组成有了一个很好的了解。与现代交叉木材研究相比,它记录了物种组成随时间的变化,这被认为是灭火的结果,也可能是湿润气候周期的开始。在俄克拉何马州中部,这意味着从以马里兰栎和星状栎为主的森林(前者更丰富)转变为两种物种数量相等的森林,德克萨斯山核桃、弗吉尼亚杜松和其他中生植物和入侵木本物种也在增加。
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Note: Pawnee Native Sumac/Tobacco Resurgence Post-Burn, Post-Flood Effects In A Degraded Grassland, Lake Texoma, Bryan County, Oklahoma Analysis of a Plant’s Response to Climate Change Factors Through the Use of Herbarium Records: Collinsia violacea Nutt. (Plantaginaceae). A Floristic Inventory of the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation’s Lexington Wildlife Management Area, Cleveland County, Oklahoma Assessment of Oklahoma Phlox (Phlox oklahomensis: Polemoniaceae) in the Gypsum Hills of Northwestern Oklahoma and Southern Kansas
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