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A landscape-scale assessment of plant communities, hydrologic processes, and state-and-transition theory in a Western juniper dominated ecosystem

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title A landscape-scale assessment of plant communities, hydrologic processes, and state-and-transition theory in a Western juniper dominated ecosystem
Names Petersen, Steven Lawrence (creator)
Stringham, Tamzen K. (advisor)
Date Issued 2004-06-14 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2005
Abstract Western juniper has rapidly expanded into sagebrush steppe communities in
the Intermountain West during the past 120 years. This expansion has occurred
across a wide range of soil types and topographic positions. These plant
communities, however, are typically treated in current peer-reviewed literature
generically. The focus of this research is to investigate watershed level response to
Western juniper encroachment at multiple topographic positions.
Data collected from plots used to measure vegetation, soil moisture, and
infiltration rates show that intercanopy sites within encroached Western juniper
communities generally exhibit a significant decrease in intercanopy plant density
and cover, decreased infiltration rates, increased water sediment content, and lower
soil moisture content. High-resolution remotely sensed imagery and Geographic
Information Systems were used with these plot level measurements to characterize
and model the landscape-scale response for both biotic and abiotic components of a
Western juniper encroached ecosystem. These data and their analyses included an
inventory of plant density, plant cover, bare ground, gap distance and cover, a plant
community classification of intercanopy patches and juniper canopy cover, soil
moisture estimation, solar insulation prediction, slope and aspect. From these data,
models were built that accurately predicted shrub density and shrub cover
throughout the watershed study area, differentiated by aspect.
We propose a new model of process-based plant community dynamics
associated with current state-and-transition theory. This model is developed from
field measurements and spatially explicit information that characterize the
relationship between the matrix mountain big sagebrush plant community and
intercanopy plant community patterns occurring within a Western juniper
dominated woodland at a landscape scale. Model parameters (states, transitions,
and thresholds) are developed based on differences in shrub density and cover,
steady-state infiltration rates, water sediment content, and percent bare ground in
response to juniper competition and topographic position. Results from both
analysis of variance and multivariate hierarchical cluster analysis indicate that
states, transitions, and thresholds can be accurately predicted for intercanopy areas
occurring within the study area. In theory, this model and the GIS-based layers
produced from this research can be used together to predict states, transitions, and
thresholds for any location within the extent of the study area. This is a valuable
tool for assessing sites at risk and those that have exceeded the ability to self-repair.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Western juniper -- Ecology -- Oregon -- Steens Mountain
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/29737

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