The sagebrush ecosystem is home to diverse wildlife, including big-game and Greater sage-grouse. Historic and contemporary land-uses, large wildfires, exotic plant invasion, and woodland expansion all represent threats to this multiple-use landscape. Efforts of federal and state agencies and private landowners across the landscape are focused on restoration and maintenance of conditions that support wildlife, livestock, energy development, and many other uses. However, this semi-arid landscape presents challenges for management due to highly variable patterns in growing conditions that lead to differences in plant composition, fuel accumulation, and vegetation recovery. Much of this variability is created by soil and climate conditions. [...]
Summary
The sagebrush ecosystem is home to diverse wildlife, including big-game and Greater sage-grouse. Historic and contemporary land-uses, large wildfires, exotic plant invasion, and woodland expansion all represent threats to this multiple-use landscape. Efforts of federal and state agencies and private landowners across the landscape are focused on restoration and maintenance of conditions that support wildlife, livestock, energy development, and many other uses. However, this semi-arid landscape presents challenges for management due to highly variable patterns in growing conditions that lead to differences in plant composition, fuel accumulation, and vegetation recovery. Much of this variability is created by soil and climate conditions. Because of their fundamental effects on plant growth, soil and climate patterns can be used to predict plant growth and regeneration. This information can then help managers understand the long-term persistence of ecosystems, resilience after wildfires and habitat treatments, and the potential for invasive weeds such as cheatgrass to spread.
This project focuses on better understanding the resistance and resilience of the sagebrush landscape to habitat change. The resistance of an ecosystem refers to how well it can maintain its processes when subjected to stress, such as a drought or wildfire, while the resilience of an ecosystem refers to how well it can recover from a stressor or adapt to changing conditions. To do this, researchers will characterize future variability in the soil environment and the sensitivity of growing conditions to potential future changes in temperature and precipitation. Instead of broadly classified climate regions, researchers will model a continuous surface of grid cells using the soil and climate conditions unique to each location. This enables the development of estimates of soil temperature and moisture across a large landscape that take into account both local and landscape-scale conditions. Researchers will also incorporate scenarios of potential future changes in temperature and precipitation, to assess the implications of these changes for habitat conditions, restoration outcomes, and fuel profiles. A better understanding of the patterns of plant production, resistance of the sagebrush ecosystem to invasion by non-native plants, and resilience of the ecosystem following wildfires can inform habitat management activities, such as restoration and reclamation.
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Sagebrush_PeterAdler.jpg “Sagebrush - Credit: Peter Adler”
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Purpose
The sagebrush ecosystem is home to diverse wildlife, including big-game and Greater sage-grouse. Historic and contemporary land-uses, large wildfires, exotic plant invasion and woodland expansion characterize widespread threats to this multiple-use landscape and create management challenges. Efforts of federal and state agencies and private landowners across the biome are focused on restoration and maintenance of conditions that support wildlife, livestock, energy development and many other uses. However, this semi-arid landscape presents challenges for management due to highly variable patterns in growing conditions leading to differences in plant composition, fuel accumulation and vegetation recovery. Much of this variability is created by soil and climate conditions. Recent work by multiple agencies and scientists defined relationships between soil and climate that characterize ecosystem recovery and resistance to degradation. These relations have important implications for management treatment outcomes, fuel profiles and fire risk, post-fire recovery and noxious weed invasions. Modern data and modeling applications focused on the soil environment can improve our ability to map variations in growing conditions. Instead of broadly classified climate regions, we model a continuous surface of grid cells using the soil and climate conditions unique to each location. The result is a spatially explicit simulation of evapotranspiration rates and soil moisture budgets across a large and variable landscape. This allows classification of each location according to traditional taxonomy and refined recognition of important variability of the soil-climate within those classes. Importantly, because this approach uses climate inputs, it can be informed by climate model scenarios to assess implications for habitat conditions, restoration outcomes and fuel profiles. Model results can guide understanding of ecosystem patterns and management of the habitat, and substitution of climate scenarios enables assessment of potential risks to habitat conditions and management actions due to climate variability across the western United States.