Spring is a season of extremes. Temperatures have fluctuated between the low 20’s and the low 80’s (Fahrenheit) over the last couple weeks. That has to make life interesting for prairie animals and plants…
We’re still on the early edge of wildflower blooming, but activity has been ramping up slowly. Many of first round of flowers are going now, though most are still blooming mainly in areas cattle grazed short last year. Temperatures this weekend and next week should bring out the rest, including in the shadier/thatchier areas.
Last weekend, Kim and I went to Gjerloff Prairie on a pleasant evening. Kim was there to run trails and I was there to find flowers and just get a pulse of the prairie. Flowers were still pretty scarce that evening. A few ground plum (Astragalus crassicarpus) were blooming, along with a few isolated plants of other Astragalus species. I was hoping for prairie dandelions (Nothocalais cuspidata) but only found four blooming plants (all on grazed south-facing slopes). After walking most of the prairie to make sure there weren’t more, I returned to the biggest patch (3 plants) spent at least half an hour photographing them from various angles and perspectives.
Prairie dandelion (Nothocalais cuspidata) at Gjerloff Prairie. Nikon 10.5mm fisheye lens. ISO 400, f/20, 1/125 sec. Prairie dandelion (Nothocalais cuspidata) at Gjerloff Prairie. Nikon 105mm macro lens. ISO 400, f/10, 1/1250 sec.
We had a dusting of snow Monday night so I zipped out to our family prairie Tuesday morning to get some photos before it melted away. When I arrived, the temperature was still well below freezing, so I wore my insulated coveralls for what I hope was the last time this spring (though I haven’t packed them away yet).
Spring flowers are awfully tough, aren’t they? The 23 degree F temperatures and a light covering of snow didn’t seem to phase them at all. As with Gjerloff prairie, most of the flowering plants I found were where grazing had been most intense last year. Shadier areas were still pretty dormant.
Ground plum, aka buffalo pea (Astragalus crassicarpus) and light snow at the Helzer family prairie. Nikon 10.5mm fisheye lens. ISO 250, f/22, 1/160 sec. Ground plum, aka buffalo pea (Astragalus crassicarpus) and light snow at the Helzer family prairie. Nikon 105mm macro lens. ISO 250, f/18, 1/100 sec. Pussytoes (Antennaria neglecta) and light snow at the Helzer family prairie. Nikon 10.5mm fisheye lens. ISO 250, f/22, 1/80 sec. Pussytoes (Antennaria neglecta) and light snow at the Helzer family prairie. Nikon 105mm macro lens. ISO 250, f/10, 1/250 sec. Ground plum, aka buffalo pea (Astragalus crassicarpus) and light snow at the Helzer family prairie. Nikon 10.5mm fisheye lens. ISO 250, f/22, 1/80 sec.
I also checked out a big patch of wild plum shrubs at Lincoln Creek, here in Aurora. It was pretty cool out, but I was hoping to find at least a few pollinators using the flowers. When I arrived, I got to watch a queen bumble bee work her way through the patch, but once she left, I only saw a couple of flies, and only one of those seemed to be interested in the flowers. I might head back over this weekend when it’s warmer and see what’s moving then.
Wild plum blossoms (Prunus americana) at Lincoln Creek Prairie. Nikon 105mm macro lens. ISO 250, f/14, 1/500 sec.Bumble bee (Bombus griseocollis) feeding on wild plum blossoms (Prunus americana) at Lincoln Creek Prairie. Nikon 105mm macro lens. ISO 250, f/14, 1/250 sec. Wild plum blossoms (Prunus americana) at Lincoln Creek Prairie. Nikon 105mm macro lens. ISO 250, f/14, 1/640 sec.
I hope you’re enjoying spring wherever you are too. This winter seemed like one of the longest in memory. I’m really looking forward to a summer full of exploration!
In land management, as in most of life, it’s important to know your objectives and periodically check in to see if you’re meeting them. Otherwise, it’s easy to get buried in work and forget what it is you’re actually trying to accomplish. The primary objective of most prairie managers, for example, isn’t to kill all the trees on their prairie or to burn a particular management unit every two or three years. If you stop and think about it, your objective is probably linked to the something like the wellbeing of a particular rare species, the breeding success of certain birds, and/or the continued diversity of plant and animal communities. Regardless of what you’re aiming for, it’s critically important to have a clear idea of what that is.
I spend a lot of time and energy managing our family prairie. Having clear objectives makes it a lot easier see if I’m making progress.
Now, once you know what it is you’re trying to accomplish, you just have to go out and measure your success, right? Should be as easy as anything. Sure. That’s why we’re all so good at ecological monitoring.
In some cases, simple objectives lead to simple monitoring needs. If your primary goal is the wellbeing of a particular rare plant, monitoring is pretty straightforward. You can just go out and count stems, flowers, seed heads, new seedlings, or whatever metric you think is most important. You can then look at how those metrics are responding to your management, weather patterns, and other factors. If the plant species is doing well, keep doing what you’re doing. If it’s not, try something different.
Few of us, though, have such a simple objective. In fact, I’d argue that most of us should have much broader and more ambitious objectives that include the overall diversity and resilience of the various plant and animal communities in our prairies. We might have a few groups of those plants or animals we’re paying special attention to, either because our organization mandates it or because we particularly like them. There’s nothing wrong with that, but since prairies rely on complex networks and processes to remain healthy, focusing only on a few species can mean ignoring the larger communities our favorite species rely on.
Great. So we’re going to keep our prairies nice and diverse. So to monitor our progress, we just have to…. count… every…. species??
This is the point at which a lot of prairie managers throw up their hands and turn back toward the invasive plants they’re fighting. Monitoring is too much work. I know I have to kill these trees. I know I have to burn this prairie. I’ll just focus on that and hope for the best.
Before you join those frustrated land stewards, give me a quick chance to throw out an idea. If you’re managing for diverse plant and animal communities, you’ve probably thought about what kind of habitats and growing conditions will be required right? Many of us strive to create a shifting mosaic of habitat types across our prairies to accommodate as much diversity as possible. If so, setting objectives for the habitat conditions you want to provide each year gives you something clear and measurable to track.
Using the shifting habitat mosaic approach as an example, the first objective is to provide patches of habitat across the prairie that represent the widest range of possibilities – short/sparse habitat, tall/dense habitat, thin/weedy habitat, etc. The second objective is to vary the location of those habitat patches year to year. We can measure that! If you have the time, you could do formal monitoring by sampling the height, density, and other features of the prairie vegetation in each habitat patch, but you wouldn’t necessarily have to. For most of us, simply making an annual map showing the location and general description of each habitat patch might be sufficient. Do those maps show that you’re creating the kind of habitat mosaic you want?
Here’s a simplified example of what an annual map of habitat conditions could look like. Something like this could be superimposed on an aerial photo of a site or just a rough drawing of a prairie. Each of the squares above represents a management unit that is being treated differently than the others. In this case, those boundaries stay the same, but that wouldn’t necessarily be the case in real life. Click to see an enlarged version.
To be clear, that map is different from a map that simply documents your management. That can be useful too, but I’m talking about a map of the actual habitat conditions on the site. The two are hopefully linked, but one of the benefits of monitoring is to see if your management is actually doing what you need it to do, right? Your map should have lines roughly drawn around patches of habitat that are different from each other and written descriptions of each patch. You can then compare maps over several years to see if you’re providing the range of habitat types you want and if they’re shifting around the prairie as desired. This kind of map is also really helpful as you are planning your next management because you can see where you’ve been and think about where you want to go next.
Providing habitat patches that span the entire spectrum of vegetation structure types is important for maintaining prairie diversity. Here’s an example of habitat structure that is often lacking – short grass and tall forbs.
Mapping habitat is pretty easy, but if that’s the only monitoring we’re doing, we’re making some pretty big assumptions. Primarily, we’re assuming the habitats we’re creating are supporting the kind of broad diversity of organisms we want. We need to test those assumptions when we can.
Fortunately, testing assumptions can be a lot easier than monitoring. For one thing, you don’t have to test every assumption over and over. Instead, assumption testing is about answering a distinct question. It’s really research, rather than monitoring. Example questions might include:
Do we have all the grassland bird species we’d expect in this region nesting in our prairie each year?
Are there several species of blooming flowers available for pollinators at all times during the season?
Are there any plant species that never get a chance to bloom and reproduce over the cycle of management being applied?
Some of these questions can be addressed by simply recording what you see (what species of birds do I see in each management unit each year?). Others might take a concerted effort for a few years (walking a bi-weekly or monthly transect through each habitat patch and listing the flowers you see blooming). As you investigate each assumption, you’ll probably learn things that will help you adjust your management approach. That will lead to new questions.
You might not have the time or resources to answer all your questions by yourself. In that case, you might be able to talk to other prairie managers in your area to see what they’ve learned, or turn to scientists who have studied the topic. If you work for an organization with resources and/or relationships with academic institutions, you might be able to collaborate with them on a graduate research project.
At our Platte River Prairies, we are trying to track populations of regal fritillary butterflies because it is a species that seems to have dropped in numbers across the whole valley and we want to see if we can figure out what’s going on and what we might be able to do about it.
There is, of course, value in long-term monitoring too. If you have the time or capacity to track the diversity/composition of your plant community – even in a few portions of your site – that can be really helpful. I’ve learned a lot by doing that in selected management units over time (collecting data annually in some and less frequently in others), but I don’t just collect the data and store it away. I dive into it to help me test assumptions. I’ve been able to see how individual species and overall species diversity respond to various management and weather patterns and feel confident that we’ve not lost any plant species from our prairies.
It’s tempting to look for an indicator species or two that you can track as a way to measure the overall health of the ecosystem. Prairie chickens, for example are often held up as a potential indicator species because they require a wide range of habitat types. I think that’s a trap. If you care about prairie chickens or other birds, by all means, pay attention to how they’re doing. But an abundance of prairie chickens or grasshopper sparrows doesn’t tell you anything about how sunflowers or leafhoppers are doing. If you want to measure habitat, measure habitat – and do some periodic checks to see if the species you’re expecting are responding appropriately. I’m not aware of any single species or group of species that is so tied to the rest of an ecological community that their abundance or breeding success will tell you how the rest of the community is doing.
Grassland birds are often proposed as indicators of prairie condition because each species has its own habitat requirement. However, while bird diversity is good to have, it doesn’t necessarily reflect how plant or invertebrate diversity is doing.
Don’t beat yourself up for not counting every flower, bird, or bee in your prairie each year, but don’t throw up your hands and give up either. Your top priority should be to have clear management objectives. Once you have those, make a list of ways you could measure success and see what seems feasible. It’s important to track your results in some way, but it doesn’t have to be overly time consuming to be helpful. Do what you can, learn from what others are doing, and keep looking for ways to improve your management.