Thursday
Nov302023

Avoiding mortality: timing prescribed burns in ornate box turtle habitat

"Avoiding mortality: timing prescribed burns in ornate box turtle habitat"

This open access article was published October 10, 2023, in Journal of Wildlife ManagementAccess the article through the permanent web address (DOI). (https://doi.org/10.1002/jwmg.22510)

Abstract

Fire is a vital management tool for maintaining prairie ecosystems. Prescribed burns control invasive species, regulate succession, stimulate plant growth, and are a cheap and effective method for removing excess biomass; however, fire can also inadvertently cause wildlife mortality, placing land managers in a challenging situation. Turtles are especially at risk of mortality from fire because of their low mobility and population sensitivity to reductions in adult survival. We studied ornate box turtles (Terrapene ornata) at 3 sites in Illinois, USA, from 2019–2022 to determine the best predictors of above-ground activity so land managers can conduct prescribed burns when turtles are underground. We used turtle shell temperature, air temperature, soil temperature, and precipitation data to develop a predictive model of above-ground activity. The best model for predicting above-ground activity included an interaction between day of year and current air temperature. Earlier in spring and later in fall, above-ground activity is more likely at higher air temperatures compared to later in spring and earlier in fall when the same likelihood of above-ground activity is predicted at lower air temperatures. In spring, we recommend burning in Illinois ornate box turtle habitat before 1 April when air temperature is <10°C and in fall after 1 November when air temperature is <15°C. Above these temperature thresholds, there is a >5% likelihood that turtles in northern populations are above ground.

Until the nineteenth century, fire was a major process shaping ecosystems throughout the Great Plains and midwestern United States (Axelrod 1985, Frost 1998). Today native grasslands in the region have mostly been converted to agriculture, with as little as 0.1% of historical tallgrass prairie remaining (Samson and Knopf 1994). Land managers commonly use fire to maintain and restore prairie ecosystems, control invasive species, remove biomass, regulate succession, and stimulate plant growth (Hulbert 1988, Brockway et al. 2002). While prescribed burns have many benefits, especially related to vegetation, they also inadvertently cause vertebrate mortality (Erwin and Stasiak 1979, Buchanan et al. 2021). Considering many species of wildlife inhabiting grasslands are now threatened and confined to isolated habitat fragments, land managers face a dilemma whereby they must use fire to maintain ecosystem health but risk causing mortality of threatened wildlife species from burning.

Varying fire intensity, speed, and timing are all strategies to avoid harming wildlife during prescribed burns. Less-intense fires moving into the wind (backfires) are slower and may offer time for wildlife to flee; however, backfires more completely burn the area, leaving little shelter or refuge for species with low mobility. Because fire speed and intensity do not affect all species equally, it is important for managers to consider local assemblages in an area and species' responses to fire (Smith et al. 2001, Sutton et al. 2013, Greenberg et al. 2019). For birds and mammals, often adults can escape fire, whereas their young cannot, and so burning before or after seasonal reproduction can reduce mortality risk. Similarly, for reptiles and amphibians sheltering underground during winter, burns can be targeted to coincide with their inactive period. However, early spring and late fall burns may not stimulate plant growth as well as summer burns (Copeland et al. 2002), and so decisions about the risk to threatened species from summer fires need to be balanced with any benefits to restoring or maintaining their habitat. For most reptiles and amphibians, we have an incomplete understanding of their basic life history and behavior, making it challenging to predict if a threatened species is above ground and at risk of mortality from fire on days when conditions are otherwise favorable for burning.

Turtles and tortoises are among the most threatened vertebrates, with 67.5% of assessed species at risk of extinction (International Union for Conservation of Nature [IUCN] 2022). They are also especially susceptible to mortality from fire because of their limited mobility and their slow life-history pace. Turtles typically have a long generation time, low fecundity, and high adult survival, meaning population persistence depends heavily on the survival of adults (Heppell 1998). When adult survival declines, so do populations. While some have argued reptile mortality resulting from prescribed burns is generally outweighed by the benefits of improving habitat quality (Russell et al. 1999), when turtle populations are small and isolated, any additive mortality to adults can be the difference between a stable and a declining population (Daigle and Jutras 2005, Howell and Seigel 2019). As such, it is imperative to only burn in the habitat of threatened turtle species during times of the year when animals are likely underground, in water, or otherwise at low risk of mortality.

North American box turtles (Terrapene spp.) are experiencing declining populations range-wide and occur in habitats where fire is often used as a prescriptive management tool. Several studies have examined the effects of prescribed burns on eastern box turtles (T. carolina), documenting injuries from burns, reduced annual survival in burned versus unburned areas, and recording a mass mortality event of 47 dead individuals after a summer burn (Howey and Roosenburg 2013, Roe et al. 2019, Buchanan et al. 2021, Cross et al. 2021). Eastern box turtles can survive prescribed burns if sheltering during winter dormancy and if they can take refuge in moist hardwood forests near streams (Roe et al. 2019, Harris et al. 2020, Roe and Bayles 2021). Similarly, no mortality was recorded in a Florida box turtle (T. c. bauri) population as long as burns were conducted during the dry season when turtles were dormant (Platt et al. 2010). Thus, determining the factors influencing when box turtles are active and susceptible to mortality from fire is important for guiding burn decisions.

Few studies have examined overwintering behavior in the ornate box turtle (T. ornata), a grassland species with a declining population trend (IUCN 2022). The species ranges from the Sonoran Desert northeast across the Great Plains and Midwest, with northern populations overwintering underground 6–7 months per year (Doroff and Keith 1990). In Missouri, USA, captive ornate box turtles maintained in outdoor pens emerged in spring following a 5-day warming period when the soil temperature reached 7°C (Grobman 1990). Fieldwork in Iowa, USA, did not support soil temperature triggering emergence (Bernstein and Black 2005). Instead, the authors proposed above-ground activity in spring is initiated by a combination of environmental factors, including air temperature and precipitation. In Illinois, USA, Milanovich et al. (2017) identified microhabitat characteristics of overwintering sites and the date range of winter ingress and egress, with turtles completely underground by 15 October and emerging in spring starting 10 April. Further research is warranted on ornate box turtle overwintering behavior considering the limited number of studies and their varied results.

Our objective was to determine the best predictor(s) for when ornate box turtles are above ground so land managers can avoid burning when turtles are at risk from fire. Based on previous studies, we hypothesized air temperature, soil temperature, and precipitation could be associated with above-ground activity. Additionally, we anticipated that the day of year and study site could influence the effects of environmental variables because temperature and precipitation vary seasonally and locally.

Management Implications

When conducting prescribed burns in the habitat of ornate box turtles, we recommend considering the day of year and the current air temperature to decide the risk of fire to turtles. In Illinois, by 1 March at 15°C, there is a 10% likelihood of a turtle being above ground. By 1 April at the same temperature, the predicted likelihood rises to 20%. In fall, on 1 October at 16°C, there is a 10% likelihood of a turtle moving above ground, which decreases to 6% at the same temperature on 1 November. Our results support burning in our study region earlier in spring and later in fall at cooler temperatures to avoid mortality. Still, we recognize land managers must balance a range of costs, benefits, and constraints when deciding the timing of prescribed burns. Historically, large, connected metapopulations of ornate box turtles should have been able to absorb incidental mortality from fire. Many turtle populations today are small, isolated, and likely declining. Thus, we recommend managers prioritize ornate box turtles when burning in their habitat to avoid mortality, especially of adults.

Citation

Edmonds, D. A.,  Bach, E. M.,  Colton, A. L.,  Jaquet, I. S.,  Kessler, E. J., and  Dreslik, M. J..  2023.  Avoiding mortality: timing prescribed burns in ornate box turtle habitatJournal of Wildlife Management e22510.



Friday
Nov242023

"A roadmap for pyrodiversity science"

"A roadmap for pyrodiversity science"

This open access article was published October 25, 2023, in Journal of Biogeography. Access the article via the permanent web address (DOI). (https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.14745) 

Abstract

Background

Contemporary and projected shifts in global fire regimes highlight the importance of understanding how fire affects ecosystem function and biodiversity across taxa and geographies. Pyrodiversity, or heterogeneity in fire history, is often an important driver of biodiversity, though it has been largely overlooked until relatively recently. In this paper, we synthesise previous research to develop a theoretical framework on pyrodiversity–biodiversity relationships and propose future research and conservation management directions.

Theoretical Framework

Pyrodiversity may affect biodiversity by diversifying available ecological niches, stabilising community networks and/or supporting diverse species pools available for post-fire colonisation. Further, pyrodiversity's effects on biodiversity vary across different spatial, temporal and organismal scales depending on the mobility and other life history traits of the organisms in question and may be mediated by regional eco-evolutionary factors such as historical fire regimes. Developing a generalisable understanding of pyrodiversity effects on biodiversity has been challenging, in part because pyrodiversity can be quantified in various ways.

Applying the Pyrodiversity Concept

Exclusion of Indigenous fire stewardship, fire suppression, increased unplanned ignitions and climate change have led to dramatic shifts in fire regimes globally. Such shifts include departures from historic levels of pyrodiversity and add to existing challenges to biodiversity conservation in fire-prone landscapes. Managers navigating these challenges can be aided by targeted research into observed contemporary pyrodiversity–biodiversity relationships as well as knowledge of historical reference conditions informed by both Indigenous and local ecological knowledge and western science.

Future Research Directions

Several promising avenues exist for the advancement of pyrodiversity science to further both theoretical and practical goals. These lines of investigation include but are not limited to (1) testing the increasing variety of pyrodiversity metrics and analytical approaches; (2) assessing the spatial and temporal scale-dependence of pyrodiversity's influence; (3) reconstructing historical pyrodiversity patterns and developing methods for predicting and/or promoting future pyrodiversity; and (4) expanding the focus of pyrodiversity science beyond biodiversity to better understand its influence on ecosystem function and processes more broadly.

Keywords: biodiversity; climate change; conservation; fire ecology; fire regimes; landscape ecology; pyrodiversity

Citation

Steel, Z.L., Miller, J.E., Ponisio, L.C., Tingley, M.W., Wilkin, K., Blakey, R., Hoffman, K.M. and Jones, G., 2023. A roadmap for pyrodiversity science. Journal of Biogeography.

Tuesday
Nov212023

"Changes in Groundlayer Communities with Variation in Trees, Sapling Layers, and Fires during 34 Years of Oak Savanna Restoration"

"Changes in Groundlayer Communities with Variation in Trees, Sapling Layers, and Fires during 34 Years of Oak Savanna Restoration"

This open access article was published November 9, 2023, in Natural Areas Journal. Access the article via the permanent web address (DOI). (https://doi.org/10.3375/0885-8608-43.4.243) 

Abstract

Like many open habitats, sustainability of oak savannas in midwestern North America depends on periodic disturbances such as fires to curtail encroachment by tall woody plants. An uncertainty in restoring and sustaining oak savannas is how frequently fires must occur to maintain the groundlayer plant diversity savannas are known for and what levels of tree canopy and sapling layer encroachment trigger shifts in groundlayers. In an oak savanna undergoing restoration in northwestern Ohio, we examined how groundlayers changed with temporal variation in tree (≥10 cm in diameter) and sapling (<10 cm) layers and prescribed fires by remeasuring permanent plots up to 17 times from 1988 to 2021. Groundlayer cover was maximized when tree basal area was <13 m2/ha (35% tree canopy cover), there were fewer than 100 trees/ha, and fire had occurred since the previous growing season. Illustrating attrition in groundlayers above these thresholds, two-thirds of savanna groundlayer cover disappeared when tree density exceeded 100/ha and over 2 y passed without fires. Through savanna species persisting at low cover, species richness endured longer between fires (4+ years), doubled during periods with at least one fire in 3 y, and increased by a third when saplings were sparse (<80 stems/ha). Savanna groundlayers during the 34 y study fluctuated with intermittent increases and decreases associated with dynamics in trees, saplings, and time since fire. Although they require a major commitment because their benefits are so transient, frequent, low-severity prescribed fires appear capable of sustaining savanna groundlayer diversity indefinitely under prevailing conditions.

Keywords: Fire frequency; overstory–understory relationships; shrubby layer; species richness; woody plant encroachment

Citation

Abella, Scott R., LaRae A. Sprow, Karen S. Menard, Timothy A. Schetter, and Lawrence G. Brewer. "Changes in Groundlayer Communities with Variation in Trees, Sapling Layers, and Fires during 34 Years of Oak Savanna Restoration." Natural Areas Journal 43, no. 4 (2023): 243-252.

Friday
Nov172023

“Wildfire, Smoke Exposure, Human Health, and Environmental Justice Need to be Integrated into Forest Restoration and Management” 

“Wildfire, Smoke Exposure, Human Health, and Environmental Justice Need to be Integrated into Forest Restoration and Management 

This open access article was published May 7, 2022, in Current Environmental Health Reports. Access the article via the permanent web address (DOI). (https://doi.org/10.1007/s40572-022-00355-7) 

Abstract 

Purpose of Review 

Increasing wildfire size and severity across the western United States has created an environmental and social crisis that must be approached from a transdisciplinary perspective. Climate change and more than a century of fire exclusion and wildfire suppression have led to contemporary wildfires with more severe environmental impacts and human smoke exposure. Wildfires increase smoke exposure for broad swaths of the US population, though outdoor workers and socially disadvantaged groups with limited adaptive capacity can be disproportionally exposed. Exposure to wildfire smoke is associated with a range of health impacts in children and adults, including exacerbation of existing respiratory diseases such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, worse birth outcomes, and cardiovascular events. Seasonally dry forests in Washington, Oregon, and California can benefit from ecological restoration as a way to adapt forests to climate change and reduce smoke impacts on affected communities. 

Recent Findings 

Each wildfire season, large smoke events, and their adverse impacts on human health receive considerable attention from both the public and policymakers. The severity of recent wildfire seasons has state and federal governments outlining budgets and prioritizing policies to combat the worsening crisis. This surging attention provides an opportunity to outline the actions needed now to advance research and practice on conservation, economic, environmental justice, and public health interests, as well as the trade-offs that must be considered. 

Summary 

Scientists, planners, foresters and fire managers, fire safety, air quality, and public health practitioners must collaboratively work together. This article is the result of a series of transdisciplinary conversations to find common ground and subsequently provide a holistic view of how forest and fire management intersect with human health through the impacts of smoke and articulate the need for an integrated approach to both planning and practice. 

Keywords: Wildland fire; Public health; Air quality; Smoke; Exposure; Ecological restoration; Prescribed burning; Environmental justice; Collaborative partnerships 

Citation 

D’Evelyn, Savannah M., Jihoon Jung, Ernesto Alvarado, Jill Baumgartner, Pete Caligiuri, R. Keala Hagmann, Sarah B. Henderson et al. "Wildfire, Smoke exposure, human health, and environmental justice need to be integrated into forest restoration and management." Current environmental health reports 9, no. 3 (2022): 366-385. 

Friday
Nov032023

"Functional consequences of animal community changes in managed grasslands: An application of the CAFE approach"

"Functional consequences of animal community changes in managed grasslands: An application of the CAFE approach"

This article was accepted for online publication Oct. 25, 2023 in the journal Ecology. Access online via the permanent weblink (DOI): https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.4192

Abstract

In the midst of an ongoing biodiversity crisis, much research has focused on species losses and their impacts on ecosystem functioning. The functional consequences (ecosystem response) of shifts in communities are shaped not only by changes in species richness, but also by compositional shifts that result from species losses and gains. Species differ in their contribution to ecosystem functioning, so species identity underlies the consequences of species losses and gains on ecosystem functions. Such research is critical to better predict the impact of disturbances on communities and ecosystems. We used the ‘Community Assembly and the Functioning of Ecosystems’ (CAFE) approach, a modification of the Price equation to understand the functional consequences and relative effects of richness and composition changes in small non-volant mammal and dung beetle communities as a result of two common disturbances in North American prairie restorations – prescribed fire and reintroduction of large grazing mammals. Previous research in this system shows dung beetles are critically important decomposers, while small mammals modulate much energy in prairie food webs. We found that dung beetle communities were more responsive to bison reintroduction and prescribed fires than small non-volant mammals. Dung beetle richness increased after bison reintroduction, with higher dung beetle community biomass resulting from changes in remaining species (context-dependent component) rather than species turnover (richness components); prescribed fire caused a minor increase in dung beetle biomass for the same reason. For small mammals, bison reintroduction reduced energy transfer through the loss of species, while prescribed fire had little impact on either small mammal richness or energy transfer. The CAFE approach demonstrates how bison reintroduction controls small non-volant mammal communities by increasing prairie food web complexity, and increases dung beetle populations with possible benefits for soil health through dung mineralization and soil bioturbation. Prescribed fires, however, have little effect on small mammals and dung beetles, suggesting a resilience to fire. These findings illustrate the key role of re-establishing historical disturbance regimes when restoring endangered prairie ecosystems and their ecological function.


Keywords: bison; community assembly; dung beetle; ecosystem function; prescribed fire; Price equation; small mammal; species richness; tallgrass prairie restoration

Citation

Hogan, Katharine FE, Holly P. Jones, Kirstie Savage, Angela M. Burke, Peter W. Guiden, Sheryl C. Hosler, Erin Rowland‐Schaefer, and Nicholas A. Barber. "Functional consequences of animal community changes in managed grasslands: An application of the CAFE approach." Ecology (2023): e4192.


Tuesday
Jun202023

“Qualitative value of information provides a transparent and repeatable method for identifying critical uncertainty” @RallidaeRule @mlstantial @AbsLawson @mcr_evpi #DecisionScience #rxfire

“Qualitative value of information provides a transparent and repeatable method for identifying critical uncertainty”

Editor's Note: This case study was chosen for the potential relevance of the tool (Vol) for those undertaking formal decision analysis.

This open access article was published February 21, 2023 in Ecological Applications. Access via the permanent web link (DOI). (https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.2824)

Abstract

Conservation decisions are often made in the face of uncertainty because the urgency to act can preclude delaying management while uncertainty is resolved. In this context, adaptive management is attractive, allowing simultaneous management and learning. An adaptive program design requires the identification of critical uncertainties that impede the choice of management action. Quantitative evaluation of critical uncertainty, using the expected value of information, may require more resources than are available in the early stages of conservation planning. Here, we demonstrate the use of a qualitative index to the value of information (QVoI) to prioritize which sources of uncertainty to reduce regarding the use of prescribed fire to benefit Eastern Black Rails (Laterallus jamaicensis jamaicensis), Yellow Rails (Coterminous noveboracensis), and Mottled Ducks (Anas fulvigula; hereafter, focal species) in high marshes of the U.S. Gulf of Mexico. Prescribed fire has been used as a management tool in Gulf of Mexico high marshes throughout the last 30+ years; however, effects of periodic burning on the focal species and the optimal conditions for burning marshes to improve habitat remain unknown. We followed a structured decision-making framework to develop conceptual models, which we then used to identify sources of uncertainty and articulate alternative hypotheses about prescribed fire in high marshes. We used QVoI to evaluate the sources of uncertainty based on their Magnitude, Relevance for decision-making, and Reducibility. We found that hypotheses related to the optimal fire return interval and season were the highest priorities for study, whereas hypotheses related to predation rates and interactions among management techniques were lowest. These results suggest that learning about the optimal fire frequency and season to benefit the focal species might produce the greatest management benefit. In this case study, we demonstrate that QVoI can help managers decide where to apply limited resources to learn which specific actions will result in a higher likelihood of achieving the desired management objectives. Further, we summarize the strengths and limitations of QVoI and outline recommendations for its future use for prioritizing research to reduce uncertainty about system dynamics and the effects of management actions.

Keywords: adaptive management; decision analysis; Eastern Black Rail; endangered species; hunted species; marsh birds; Mottled Duck; structured decision-making; value of information; Yellow Rail

Citation

Stantial, Michelle L., Abigail J. Lawson, Auriel MV Fournier, Peter J. Kappes, Chelsea S. Kross, Michael C. Runge, Mark S. Woodrey, and James E. Lyons. "Qualitative value of information provides a transparent and repeatable method for identifying critical uncertainty." Ecological Applications (2023): e2824.

 

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Monday
Mar132023

“Regional dynamics of tick vectors of human disease” @gpfirescience @prairiefiresci @oakfirescience

“Regional dynamics of tick vectors of human disease”

Editor's note: This article addresses ticks for the central United States, with factors including fire frequency, expansion of red ceder woodlands, expansion of prairie reconstruction, and invasive tick species.

This review article was published February 2023 in Current Opinion in Insect Science. Access the article via the permanent web address (DOI). (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cois.2023.101006)

Summary

The expansion of tick-borne diseases challenges ecologists, epidemiologists, and public health professionals to understand the mechanisms underlying its emergence. The vast majority of tick-borne disease research emphasizes Ixodes spp. and Borrelia burgdorferi, with less known about other Ixodidae ticks that serve as vectors for an increasing number of pathogens of public health concern.

Here, we review and discuss the current knowledge of tick and tick-borne pathogens in an undersurveilled region of the United States.

We discuss how landscape shifts may potentially influence tick vector dynamics and expansion. We also discuss the impact of climate change on the phenology of ticks and subsequent disease transmission.

Increased efforts in the Central Plains to conduct basic science will help understand the patterns of tick distribution and pathogen prevalence. It is crucial to develop intensive datasets that may be used to generate models that can aid in developing mitigation strategies.

Citation

Wimms, Chantelle, Evan Aljundi, and Samniqueka J. Halsey. "Regional Dynamics of Tick Vectors of Human Disease." Current Opinion in Insect Science (2023): 101006.

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Friday
Mar102023

“Prescribed fire increases the number of ground-nesting bee nests in tallgrass prairie remnants”

“Prescribed fire increases the number of ground-nesting bee nests in tallgrass prairie remnants”

This article was published Feb. 22, 2023, in Insect Conservation and Diversity Access online via the permanent web address (DOI). (https://doi.org/10.1111/icad.12628)

Abstract

Prescribed burning is a common management technique in tallgrass prairie remnants, but there have been few empirical studies that directly examine burning impacts on the nesting preferences and habitat of ground-nesting bees.

We used emergence traps in remnant tallgrass prairies in western Minnesota, USA to determine whether ground-nesting bees prefer to nest in burned or unburned prairies. We estimated the total number of nests made by actively nesting bees in burned and unburned patches by assessing each specimen for wing and mandible wear, sex, and sociality. We also measured characteristics that may influence bee nesting preferences including bare ground, thatch depth, vegetative cover, and the floral community.

We found more nests of actively nesting ground-nesting bees in burned patches than unburned patches, but no differences in effective number of species of ground-nesting bees or community composition. Burned patches had higher amounts of percent bare ground and a thinner thatch layer, but no differences in percent vegetative cover, floral abundance, flowering plant species richness, effective number of species of flowers or community composition.

Our results suggest that ground-nesting bees prefer to nest in burned patches of remnant tallgrass prairies and highlight opportunities for future research to better understand bee nesting ecology in response to prairie management.

Keywords: emergence tents; emergence traps; prairie management; prescribed burn; remnant prairie

Citation

Brokaw, Julia, Zachary M. Portman, Bethanne Bruninga‐Socolar, and Daniel P. Cariveau. "Prescribed fire increases the number of ground‐nesting bee nests in tallgrass prairie remnants." Insect Conservation and Diversity (2023).

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Thursday
Mar092023

“Thicketized oak woodlands reduce groundwater recharge” @prairiefiresci @oakfirescience

“Thicketized oak woodlands reduce groundwater recharge”

Article available online Dec. 2022 in Science of the Total Environment. Access the article via the permanent web address (DOI). (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.160811)

Highlights

• Woodland thicketization is a common phenomenon across the oak savannas (USA) with possible implications for groundwater recharge.
• Chloride and soil moisture were measured under different vegetation covers in a woodland pasture in Post Oak Savanna, Texas.
• Both sets of measurements showed substantial deep drainage in the open areas and no deep drainage in the thicketized woodland.
• Our results strongly suggest that thicketization is greatly reducing recharge in the Post Oak Savannas and the underlying Carrizo-Wilcox aquifer.

Abstract

Woodlands and pastures across the Post Oak Savannas (POS) in Texas have been undergoing thicketization over the last century via encroachment by understory shrubs such as Yaupon (Ilex decidua, Ilex vomitoria) and expansion of eastern redcedar (Juniperus virginiana). Because a large part of POS overlies the Carrizo-Wilcox (CW) aquifer – the third most important aquifer in Texas, there is a strong incentive to identify opportunities to increase groundwater recharge through land management.

The purpose of this research is to evaluate the influence of thicketization of post oak (Quercus stellata) stands on deep drainage (DD) in POS. We achieved this by, a) applying chloride mass balance on soil cores, and b) simultaneously monitoring soil moisture in a woodland pasture setting in POS. Four sites representing different vegetation covers were identified for sampling: 1) a thicketized oak woodland paired with an adjacent open site, 2) a woodland mosaic, 3) a pasture and 4) a pine-oak stand paired with an adjacent open site. A total of 24 soil cores to the depth of 260 cm were collected and (soil) pore water chloride concentrations at multiple depths were measured. Soil moisture was monitored at 21 locations, to the depth of 140–260 cm using a neutron moisture meter.

Negligible DD was estimated in the thicketized woodland, whereas most open locations recorded 3–18 cm/year and the woodland mosaic 0–1 cm of DD. Soil moisture data, collected from Jul-2020 to Jun-2021 also suggested higher deep drainage fluxes under open areas – with occurrence of sub-surface saturation only under the open areas and never under the woodlands. These results suggest that the thicketization in oak savannas is substantially reducing groundwater recharge.

Given the extent of thicketized oak savannas across United States, this could be impacting water budgets and groundwater recharge rates on regional scales.

Keywords: Woody plant encroachment; Ecohydrology; Chloride mass balance; Carrizo–Wilcox aquifer; Thicketization

Citation

Basant, Shishir, Bradford P. Wilcox, Chelsea Parada, Briana M. Wyatt, and Brent D. Newman. "Thicketized oak woodlands reduce groundwater recharge." Science of The Total Environment 862 (2023): 160811.

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Thursday
Mar092023

“Impact of Eastern Redcedar encroachment on water resources in the Nebraska Sandhills” #rxfire #nitrate #hydrology @gpfirescience @prairiefiresci

“Impact of Eastern Redcedar encroachment on water resources in the Nebraska Sandhills”

This article was published Oct. 24, 2022, in Science of the Total Environment. Access the article via the permanent web address (DOI). (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.159696)

Highlights

• Streamflow reduced by 46 % compared to historical flows for 100 % redcedar encroachment.
• Encroachment increases atrazine by 4 to 30 % compared to historical concentrations.
• Nitrate increases from 0.89–0.94 mg/L to 0.98–1.02 mg/L for 100 % encroachment.

Abstract

Worldwide, tree or shrub dominated woodlands have encroached into herbaceous dominated grasslands. While very few studies have evaluated the impact of Eastern Redcedar (redcedar) encroachment on the water budget, none have analyzed the impact on water quality.

In this study, we evaluated the impact of redcedar encroachment on the water budget in the Nebraska Sand Hills and how the decreased streamflow would increase nitrate and atrazine concentrations in the Platte River. We calibrated a Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT model) for streamflow, recharge, and evapotranspiration. Using a moving window with a dilate morphological filter, encroachment scenarios of 11.9 %, 16.1 %, 28.0 %, 40.6 %, 57.5 %, 72.5 % and 100 % were developed and simulated by the calibrated model.

At 11.9 % and 100 % encroachment, streamflow was reduced by 4.6 % and 45.5 %, respectively in the Upper Middle Loup River, a tributary to the Platte River. Percolation and deep aquifer recharge increased by 27 % and 26 % at 100 % encroachment. Streamflow in the Platte River, a major water source for Omaha and Lincoln, would decrease by 2.6 %, 5.5 % and 10.5 % for 28 %, 57.5 %, and 100 % encroachment of the Loup River watershed, respectively. This reduction in streamflow could increase nitrate and atrazine concentrations in the Platte River by 4 to 15 % and 4 to 30 %, respectively.

While the density of redcedar is minimal, it is important to manage their encroachment to prevent reductions in streamflow and potential increases in pollutant concentrations.

Keywords: Soil and Water Assessment Tool; Loup River Platte River; Atrazine; Baseflow-dominated watershed

Citation

Kishawi, Yaser, Aaron R. Mittelstet, Troy E. Gilmore, Dirac Twidwell, Tirthankar Roy, and Nawaraj Shrestha. "Impact of Eastern Redcedar encroachment on water resources in the Nebraska Sandhills." Science of The Total Environment 858 (2023): 159696.

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