Trajectories and state changes of a grassland stream and riparian zone after a decade of woody vegetation removal

Author:

Dodds Walter K.1ORCID,Ratajczak Zak1ORCID,Keen Rachel M.1ORCID,Nippert Jesse B.1ORCID,Grudzinski Bartosz2,Veach Allison3ORCID,Taylor Jeffery H.1ORCID,Kuhl Amanda1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Biology Kansas State University Manhattan Kansas USA

2. Department of Geography Miami University Oxford Ohio USA

3. Department of Integrative Biology University of Texas at San Antonio San Antonio Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractRiparian zones and the streams they border provide vital habitat for organisms, water quality protection, and other important ecosystem services. These areas are under pressure from local (land use/land cover change) to global (climate change) processes. Woody vegetation is expanding in grassland riparian zones worldwide. Here we report on a decade‐long watershed‐scale mechanical removal of woody riparian vegetation along 4.5 km of stream channel in a before–after control impact experiment. Prior to this removal, woody plants had expanded into grassy riparian areas, associated with a decline in streamflow, loss of grassy plant species, and other ecosystem‐scale impacts. We confirmed some expected responses, including rapid increases in stream nutrients and sediments, disappearance of stream mosses, and decreased organic inputs to streams via riparian leaves. We were surprised that nutrient and sediment increases were transient for 3 years, that there was no recovery of stream discharge, and that areas with woody removal did not shift back to a grassland state, even when reseeded with grassland species. Rapid expansion of shrubs (Cornus drummondii, Prunus americana) in the areas where trees were removed allowed woody vegetation to remain dominant despite repeating the cutting every 2 years. Our results suggest woody expansion can fundamentally alter terrestrial and aquatic habitat connections in grasslands, resulting in inexorable movement toward a new ecosystem state. Human pressures, such as climate change, atmospheric CO2 increases, and elevated atmospheric nitrogen deposition, could continue to push the ecosystem along a trajectory that is difficult to change. Our results suggest that predicting relationships between riparian zones and the streams they border could be difficult in the face of global change in all biomes, even in well‐studied sites.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology

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