Plant Succession Studies on Subalpine Acid Mine Spoils in the Beartooth Mountains

Large areas within alpine and subalpine tundra have been x disturbed by mining during this century. The most promising method for retarding deterioration of these areas is revegetation with native species through both seeding and transplants. One natural process of revegetation which occurs on porti...

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Main Author: Howard, Patricia Lea
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Utah State University 1978
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.26076/e3a7-55f4
https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/6329
id ftdatacite:10.26076/e3a7-55f4
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spelling ftdatacite:10.26076/e3a7-55f4 2023-05-15T18:40:37+02:00 Plant Succession Studies on Subalpine Acid Mine Spoils in the Beartooth Mountains Howard, Patricia Lea 1978 https://dx.doi.org/10.26076/e3a7-55f4 https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/6329 unknown Utah State University article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 1978 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.26076/e3a7-55f4 2022-02-08T13:25:49Z Large areas within alpine and subalpine tundra have been x disturbed by mining during this century. The most promising method for retarding deterioration of these areas is revegetation with native species through both seeding and transplants. One natural process of revegetation which occurs on portions of many existing disturbances seems to be the establishment of a few species that expand with time to form matts of plants. At the McLaren Mine, located at 3000 m elevation in the Beartooth Mountains, Montana, active succession is occurring and is dominated by Carex species. Seed viability and successional patterns studies were conducted on the mine. The objectives included: 1) determinations of seed viability on the spoils, 2) determine to what extent the Carex communities enhanced seedling survival, 3) to quantify the vegetation characteristics within the Carex communities and adjacent mine spoil, and 4) determine the effect that Carex communities have on microenvironmental factors. Greenhouse tests were used to determine seed viability in soil samples taken from the mine. Paired observations in field studies were used to compare vegetational and microenvironmental differences between Carex communities and adjacent bare areas. Statistical analyses of the data collected showed that there was an adequate source of viable seeds of various species in the spoils to encourage natural revegetation if they could become established. Seedling mortality was reduced in Carex communities, apparently by decreasing soil disruption caused by frost action. Carex communities altered the microenvironment by reducing soil temperatures, wind speed, and radiation flux, and by providing a richer source of nitrogen and potassium than did the bare areas. Carex communities did not alter ?oil pH, phosphorus or soil water. Measurement of microenvironmental factors varied between the center and edge locations within the Carex communities. Species diversity and percent litter cover increased with increase in community size. Text Tundra DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
description Large areas within alpine and subalpine tundra have been x disturbed by mining during this century. The most promising method for retarding deterioration of these areas is revegetation with native species through both seeding and transplants. One natural process of revegetation which occurs on portions of many existing disturbances seems to be the establishment of a few species that expand with time to form matts of plants. At the McLaren Mine, located at 3000 m elevation in the Beartooth Mountains, Montana, active succession is occurring and is dominated by Carex species. Seed viability and successional patterns studies were conducted on the mine. The objectives included: 1) determinations of seed viability on the spoils, 2) determine to what extent the Carex communities enhanced seedling survival, 3) to quantify the vegetation characteristics within the Carex communities and adjacent mine spoil, and 4) determine the effect that Carex communities have on microenvironmental factors. Greenhouse tests were used to determine seed viability in soil samples taken from the mine. Paired observations in field studies were used to compare vegetational and microenvironmental differences between Carex communities and adjacent bare areas. Statistical analyses of the data collected showed that there was an adequate source of viable seeds of various species in the spoils to encourage natural revegetation if they could become established. Seedling mortality was reduced in Carex communities, apparently by decreasing soil disruption caused by frost action. Carex communities altered the microenvironment by reducing soil temperatures, wind speed, and radiation flux, and by providing a richer source of nitrogen and potassium than did the bare areas. Carex communities did not alter ?oil pH, phosphorus or soil water. Measurement of microenvironmental factors varied between the center and edge locations within the Carex communities. Species diversity and percent litter cover increased with increase in community size.
format Text
author Howard, Patricia Lea
spellingShingle Howard, Patricia Lea
Plant Succession Studies on Subalpine Acid Mine Spoils in the Beartooth Mountains
author_facet Howard, Patricia Lea
author_sort Howard, Patricia Lea
title Plant Succession Studies on Subalpine Acid Mine Spoils in the Beartooth Mountains
title_short Plant Succession Studies on Subalpine Acid Mine Spoils in the Beartooth Mountains
title_full Plant Succession Studies on Subalpine Acid Mine Spoils in the Beartooth Mountains
title_fullStr Plant Succession Studies on Subalpine Acid Mine Spoils in the Beartooth Mountains
title_full_unstemmed Plant Succession Studies on Subalpine Acid Mine Spoils in the Beartooth Mountains
title_sort plant succession studies on subalpine acid mine spoils in the beartooth mountains
publisher Utah State University
publishDate 1978
url https://dx.doi.org/10.26076/e3a7-55f4
https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/6329
genre Tundra
genre_facet Tundra
op_doi https://doi.org/10.26076/e3a7-55f4
_version_ 1766230018604662784