Upper Midwest forest-savanna transition
Upper Midwest forest-savanna transition | |
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Ecoregion Preserve (Wisconsin)
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Ecology | |
Biome | Temperate broadleaf and mixed forest |
Borders | |
Bird species | 215[1] |
Mammal species | 62[1] |
Geography | |
Area | 166,100 km2 (64,100 sq mi) |
Countries | United States and Canada |
States/Provinces | Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ontario and Manitoba |
Conservation | |
Habitat loss | 62.5%[1] |
Protected | 4.7%[1] |
The Upper Midwest forest-savanna transition is a terrestrial ecoregion that is defined by the World Wildlife Fund. An oak savanna plant community located in the Upper Midwest region of the United States, it is a transitory ecotone between the tallgrass prairies to the west and the temperate deciduous forests to the east. A part of the Upper Mississippi River basin, it is considered endangered with less than 5% of the original ecosystem remaining intact, due mostly to overgrazing and conversion to agriculture.[2]
Fire and disturbance
Historically, wildfire has been the primary driver and determinant of the forest dynamics in the plant community. Due to this the resulting canopy structure has been relatively sparse (the basal area ranges approximately from 4 to 29 meters hectare−1). Presence and biodiversity of plant species is largely controlled by the frequency of fire. Typical tallgrass prairie vegetation such as grasses, forbs, shrubs, and sedges, increase with an increase in the amount of fire, whereas tree density and basal area decreases.[3]
After European American settlement and the abandonment of fire as a land management regime, most savannas have been converted into closed canopy woodlands, with shade tolerant and fire-intolerant species dominating rather than the historic primary and secondary succession species dependent on fire.[4]
Species distribution
Trees:
- Quercus macrocarpa (Bur oak)
- Tilia americana (American basswood)
- Acer saccharum (Sugar maple)
- Quercus rubra (Red oak)
Intact habitat
A survey in 1985 concluded that only 26 square kilometres (10 sq mi) of intact habitat remain, roughly 0.02% of what is estimated to have existed at the time of European settlement. Highly dispersed and fragmented, none of the present habitat falls under the designation of National Forests but comes under the administration of the states' Department of Natural Resourcess or federal entities such as the Fish and Wildlife Service. Remaining intact habitat areas include:[5]
- Devil's Lake State Park, on the Baraboo Range in south-central Wisconsin
- Savanna Army Depot in extreme northwestern Illinois
- Parts of the Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife and Fish Refuge in eastern Minnesota and western Wisconsin
- Richard J. Dorer Memorial Hardwood State Forest in the Driftless Area of southeastern Minnesota
- Whitewater State Park, also in the Driftless Area
- Necedah National Wildlife Refuge in central Wisconsin
- Horicon Marsh in southeastern Wisconsin
- Kettle Moraine State Forest in southeastern Wisconsin
See also
- List of ecoregions in the United States (WWF)
- Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve – an ecological research station specializing in fire ecology and its effects on oak savannas run by the University of Minnesota
- Big Woods
- Oak savanna
References
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- Pages with reference errors
- Pages with broken file links
- Temperate broadleaf and mixed forests in the United States
- Temperate grasslands, savannas, and shrublands in the United States
- Ecoregions of the United States
- Ecoregions of Minnesota
- Flora of the Plains-Midwest (United States)
- Plant communities of the Eastern United States
- Plant communities of Michigan
- Plant communities of Minnesota
- Plant communities of Wisconsin