Skip to main content

Influence of land-use and conservation programs on wetland plant communities of the semiarid United States Great Plains

Citation

Influence of land-use and conservation programs on wetland plant communities of the semiarid United States Great Plains: Biological ConservationBiological Conservation, v. 146, iss. 1, p. 108-115.

Summary

Depressional wetlands are predominant surface hydrological features providing critical societal ecosystem services in the semiarid United States High Plains. Critical wetland properties may be threatened because this 30 million ha short-grass prairie largely was converted from grassland to cropland. Further, the United States Department of Agriculture enrolled marginal cropland into the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP). CRP reduces topsoil erosion by planting permanent cover on croplands. In the High Plains, introduced tall-grasses primarily were planted in CRP, possibly reducing precipitation runoff, an important hydroperiod driver in wetlands. We assessed land-use influence on important wetland processes (wetland area, inundation, [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

metadata.xml
Potential Metadata Source

View
4.18 KB application/mods+xml

Communities

  • Integrated Landscape Modeling (ILM)

Tags

Categories
Types

Provenance

Data source
File Processing
File Process
Type
MODS
Reference Item
High Plains Publications
Reference File
THP Publications.xml

Additional Information

Citation Extension

citationTypejournal
journalBiological ConservationBiological Conservation
parts
typevolume
value146
typeissue
value1
typepages
value108-115

Item Actions

View Item as ...

Save Item as ...

View Item...