Abstract

Many perennial plants in semiarid rangelands have experienced population declines, and understanding the ecological and demographic processes behind these declines is important to slowing or reversing them. Although anthropogenic disturbances drive many declines, other sorts of environmental variability, such as the differences in solar radiation with aspect, may impact population success locally. We experimentally assessed the role of solar radiation in driving an apparent decline in a common perennial bunchgrass, bluebunch wheatgrass (Pseudoroegneria spicata), on south-facing slopes at a site in the Columbia Basin of North America. Across three separate experiments on south-facing slopes, we observed dramatically (5−36 ×) higher seedling success in plots shaded to approximate the solar radiation of north-facing slopes relative to adjacent open (unshaded) plots. When we applied the rates of seedling success from these experiments to demographic models from this site, we found that seedling success in unshaded plots was often too low to allow a stable population on south-facing slopes, but that seedling success in shaded plots was often high enough to allow a stable or increasing population on north-facing slopes. We originally hypothesized that the primary mechanism driving this effect was water stress caused by greater evaporation from hotter open plots. However, despite soils in open plots being consistently hotter than soils in shaded plots, we did not observe a clear pattern of greater soil moisture in shaded plots. Therefore, it appears that higher solar radiation or higher temperatures on south-facing slopes may be sufficient to dramatically reduce seedling survival, and that the higher density of bluebunch wheatgrass on north-facing slopes relative to south-facings slopes may be driven primarily by this low survival of seedlings. As climate warms, the reduced seedling survival that threatens our bluebunch wheatgrass population may be expected to threaten many other species of perennials in similar rangelands.

Parker, T. H., Gerber, A., Campbell, E., Simonson, M., Shriver, R. K., & Persico, L. 2024, Solar Radiation Drives Potential Demographic Collapse in a Perennial Bunchgrass via Dramatically Reduced Seedling Establishment, Rangeland Ecology & Management, 92, 100-112

Extension Associated Contacts

 

Also of Interest:

 
Economic Development. In Status of Tribes and Climate Change Report (D. Marks-Marino (ed.)
The chapter reviews economic development issues & opportunities that Tribes face in the age of climate change. It includes summaries pertaining to Tribal histories & trauma, harmful federal policies & subsequent land tenure issues, & the surge of economic sovereignty through rene...
Singletary, L., Clow, S., Connoly M., Marks-Marino, D., Samoy, A., & Stout, S. 2021, Status of Tribes and Climate Change Report (D. Marks-Marino (ed.). Institute for Tribal Environmental Professionals.
What Role Can Water Markets Play in Adapting to Climate Change? Evidence from Two River Basins in the Western United States
A
Koebele, E., Singletary, L., Hockaday, S., & Ormerod, K.J. 2021, In John C. Duerk (Ed.) Environmental Philosophy, Politics, and Policy. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.
Tribes and Indigenous Peoples
Climate change threatens Indigenous peoples' livelihood & economies, including agriculture, hunting & gathering, fishing, forestry, energy, recreation, & tourism enterprises. The economies rely on, but face institutional barriers to their self-determined management of water, land...
Jantarasami, L.C., Novak, R., Delgado, R., Marino, E., McNeeley, S., Narducci, C., Singletary, L., Raymond-Yakoubian, J., & Rowys Whyte, K. 2018, Reidmiller, D.R., C.W. Avery, D.R. Easterling, K.E. Kunkel, K.L.M. Lewis, T.K. Maycock, & B.C. Stewart (Eds.), Impacts, Risks, and Adaptation in the United States: Fourth National Climate Assessment, Volume II. Washington, DC: US Global Change Research Program, pp. 570–594.
Collaborative Modeling to Assess and Enhance Community Climate Resiliency
Creating effective community responses to improve resilience to extreme climate events, such as prolonged drought, requires acknowledging and understanding the interaction between human and natural systems.
Singletary, L. 2016, Extension | University of Nevada, Reno, Fact Sheet FS-16-04
Western Land Managers will Need all Available Tools for Adapting to Climate Change, Including Grazing: A Critique of Beschta et al.
In a previous article, Beschta et al. (Environ Manag 51(2):474-491, 2013) argue that grazing by large ungulates (both native and domestic) should be eliminated or greatly reduced on western public lands to reduce potential climate change impacts...
Svejcar,Tony, Chad Boyd, Kirk Davies, Matthew Madsen, Jon Bates, Roger Sheley, Clayton Marlow, David Bohnert, Mike Borman, Ricardo Mata-Gonza`lez, John Buckhouse, Tamzen Stringham, Barry Perryman Sherman Swanson, Kenneth Tate, Mel George, George Ruyle, Bruce Roundy, Chris Call, Kevin Jensen, Karen Launchbaugh, Amanda Gearhart, Lance Vermeire, John Tanaka, Justin Derner, Gary Frasier, Kris Havstad, 2014, Environmental Management