Ecosystem resilience to invasion and drought: Insights after 24 years in a rare never‐grazed grassland

Author:

Duniway Michael C.1ORCID,Finger‐Higgens Rebecca1ORCID,Geiger Erika L.1,Hoover David L.2ORCID,Pfennigwerth Alix A.1,Knight Anna C.1,Van Scoyoc Matthew3,Miller Mark34,Belnap Jayne1

Affiliation:

1. U.S. Geological Survey, Southwest Biological Science Center Moab Utah USA

2. Rangeland Resources & Systems Research Unit, U.S. Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service Fort Collins Colorado USA

3. National Park Service Southeast Utah Group Parks Moab Utah USA

4. National Park Service Wrangell‐St. Elias National Park and Preserve Copper Center Alaska USA

Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding the resilience of ecosystems globally is hampered by the complex and interacting drivers of change characteristic of the Anthropocene. This is true for drylands of the western US, where widespread alteration of disturbance regimes and spread of invasive non‐native species occurred with westward expansion during the 1800s, including the introduction of domestic livestock and spread of Bromus tectorum, an invasive non‐native annual grass. In addition, this region has experienced a multi‐decadal drought not seen for at least 1200 years with potentially large and interacting impacts on native plant communities. Here, we present 24 years of twice‐annual plant cover monitoring (1997–2021) from a semiarid grassland never grazed by domestic livestock but subject to a patchy invasion of B. tectorum beginning in ~1994, compare our findings to surveys done in 1967, and examine potential climate drivers of plant community changes. We found a significant warming trend in the study area, with more than 75% of study year temperatures being warmer than average (1966–2021). We observed a native perennial grass community with high resilience to climate forcings with cover values like those in 1967. In invaded patches, B. tectorum cover was greatest in the early years of this study (1997–2001; ~20%–40%) but was subsequently constrained by climate and subtle variation in soils, with limited evidence of long‐term impacts to native vegetation, contradicting earlier studies. Our ability to predict year‐to‐year variation in functional group and species cover with climate metrics varied, with a 12‐month integrated index and fall and winter patterns appearing most important. However, declines to near zero live cover in recent years in response to regional drought intensification leave questions regarding the resiliency of intact grasslands to ongoing aridification and whether the vegetation observations reported here may be a leading indicator of impending change in this protected ecosystem.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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