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| Home > Reading the Landscape > Ecology > Prairies of the Preserve | |
Prairies of the Lakeshore Nature Preserve
According to early survey records, tallgrass prairies and oak savannas once covered much of southern Wisconsin. Almost all have disappeared because these lands are unmatched for agriculture. Mixed grass and short grass prairies are mainly located west of Wisconsin as moisture levels decrease towards the Rocky Mountains, but rare remnants can be found here on sand barrens and steep rocky hillsides unsuitable for agriculture. We live in a transition zone between the deciduous
broad-leaved forests to the east and the prairie grasslands to the west. While prairie species
(even those of mesic prairies) are better adapted to drought than are
deciduous trees, ecologists agree that the prevalence of fire was an
extremely important factor in determining community Prairie species have a large fraction of their biomass (as much as 66%) underground, allowing them quickly to regrow after grazing or fire. Fire sets back invading shrubs and trees (and now many alien weeds), removes litter from the ground allowing it to warm up more quickly in the spring, and returns nutrients to the soil. It seems to stimulate both flowering and vigor of many prairie species. Thus, the forest's tendency to spread westward into grassland was limited by dry climate and fire and the prairie's tendency to spread eastward was limited by the inability of its smaller plants to compete successfully with trees for light.
UW-Madison's Biocore Program has been carrying out tallgrass prairie restoration in the field between Picnic Point and the Eagle Heights Community Gardens since 1997.
Author: Ann Burgess, edited by Bill Cronon. Version 1c, 11/15/06 mmcc Photo credits: Curt Caslavka in prairie, Cathie Bruner. Fire and aerial view, William Cronon.
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| 02/10/2008 |