A.
Publications and reports based on data from the permanent
plots of the long-term vegetation transects at the Idaho
National Engineering Laboratory.
Anderson,
J.E. 1986.
Development and structure of sagebrush steppe plant
communities. Pages
10-12 in P. J. Joss, P. W. Lynch and O. B. Williams, editors. Rangelands:
a resource under siege.
Proceedings of the Second International Rangeland
Congress. Australian
Academy of Science, Canberra.
Thirty-three
years of vegetation data on the permanent vegetation plots
were examined for trends in species composition.
Cover of grasses and shrubs fluctuated, indicating that
change was non-directional and stochastic, rather than
converging on a climax structure.
Anderson,
J.E., and K.E. Holte. 1981.
Vegetation development over 25 years without grazing on
sagebrush-dominated rangeland in southeastern Idaho.
Journal of Range Management 34:25-29.
Data
from the permanent vegetation transects were analyzed to
determine what changes had taken place in the vegetation
complex over the previous 25 years in the absence of livestock
grazing. Cover of
shrubs and perennial grasses had nearly doubled.
No evidence for seral replacement was found.
Anderson,
J.E., and R. Inouye. 1988.
Long-term dynamics of vegetation in a sagebrush steppe of
southeastern Idaho. Final
Report, Ecology and Radioecology Program, Idaho Operations
Office, U.S. Department of Energy, Idaho Falls, Idaho.
This
report describes the dynamics of vegetation over 35 years on a
subset of the permanent vegetation plots.
The results suggest that shrub cover may fluctuate by
as much as 100% and grass cover by as much as 500% within a
decade. Changes
in the cover of Bromus
tectorum are also described.
Anderson,
J.E., R.J. Jeppson, R.J. Wilkosz, G.M. Marlette, and K.E. Holte. 1978. Trends
in vegetation development on the Idaho National Engineering
Laboratory Site. Pages
144-166 in O.D. Markham, editor. Ecological
Studies on the Idaho National Engineering Laboratory Site --
1978 Progress Report. Radiological
and Environmental Sciences Laboratory, U.S. Department of
Energy, Idaho Falls, Idaho.
Data
collected in 1975 from the permanent vegetation transects were
analyzed to determine what changes had occurred in the
vegetation complex over the previous 25 years and to compare
trends in vegetal composition between grazed and non-grazed
areas. This
report includes details of the original sampling design.
Harniss,
R.O. 1968.
Vegetational changes following livestock exclusion on the
National Reactor Testing Station, southeastern Idaho.
Thesis. Utah
State University, Logan, Utah.
Analysis
of vegetation change following livestock exclusion in 1950 was
the major objective of this study.
The author concluded that there was little change that
could not be attributed to the influence of precipitation and
that "natural revegetation is slow."
Harniss,
R.O., and N.E. West. 1973a.
Changes in Artemisia tridentata/Sitanion hystrix vegetation on the National
Reactor Testing Station, southeastern Idaho.
1950 - 1965. Utah
Academy Of Sciences, Arts, and Letters Proceedings 50:10-16.
Most
of the increase in grass cover at the INEL during the period
1950 - 1965 was due to an increase in the cover of bottlebrush
squirreltail (Sitanion hystrix
= Elymus elymoides), which was designated as a climax
species for large portions of the INEL.
Harniss,
R.O., and N.E. West. 1973b.
Vegetation patterns of the National Reactor Testing
Station, southeastern Idaho.
Northwest Science 47:30-43.
Twelve
vegetation types for the INEL are described and depicted on a
map.
B.
Other recent vegetation studies at the Idaho National
Engineering and
Environmental Laboratory.
Anderson,
J.E. 1991.
Vegetation studies to support the NPR Environmental
Impact Statement. Final
Report to EG&G, Idaho, Inc., Idaho Falls, Idaho.
This
report describes sampling and analyses associated with
development of the INEL vegetation map and classification of
plant communities.
Anderson,
J.E., and G.M. Marlette. 1986.
Probabilities of seedling recruitment and the stability
of crested wheatgrass stands.
Pages 97-105 in
K. L. Johnson, editor. Crested
wheatgrass: its values, problems, and myths;
symposium proceedings.
Utah State University, Logan, Utah.
Data
on seedling emergence from undisturbed topsoil samples show
that there is a paucity of native propagules within crested
wheatgrass stands. Recruitment
probabilities favor the maintenance of a monoculture rather
than its successional replacement.
Anderson,
J.E., and M.L. Shumar. 1986.
Impacts of back-tailed jackrabbits at peak population
densities on sagebrush-steppe vegetation. Journal of Range Management 39:152-156.
Jackrabbit
exclosures were constructed in different vegetation types.
Plant cover inside and outside the exclosures was
estimated in 1979 and 1982.
Jackrabbit populations peaked in 1981.
Plant cover was significantly reduced outside the
exclosures, but relative cover of species was similar.
Shrubs were browsed heavily during the winter, but
showed compensatory growth in the spring. The results indicated that a peak in jackrabbit populations
has little impact on the structure of these plant communities.
Cole,
N.K. 1987.
The growth and water relations of Leymus
cinereus following a prescribed burn.
M.S. Thesis, Idaho State University, Pocatello, Idaho.
Plant
density, basal area, cover and biomass of Leymus
cinereus were measured in burned and unburned stands.
Plant phenological parameters and soil water content
were also estimated. Although
there was some mortality of small individuals, in general
L. cinereus plants responded vigorously to burning.
Tillers emerged earlier and plants were greener and
taller on the burned site.
Lower soil moisture content on the burn site resulted
in significantly lower plant water potentials on the burned
site for most of the growing season.
Nevertheless, basal cover on the burned site was
similar to that of the control site at the end of the first
postfire growing season.
Floyd,
D.A. 1982.
A comparison of three methods for estimating vegetal
cover in sagebrush steppe communities.
M.S. Thesis, Idaho State University, Pocatello.
This
thesis includes three chapters: 1) pre-burn characterization
of vegetation on a prescribed burn site, 2) description of a
new point interception frame for estimating vegetal cover, and
3) comparison of cover estimates, precision, and sampling
efforts for line interception, point interception, and
cover-class estimation in sagebrush steppe.
Floyd,
D.A., and J.E. Anderson. 1982.
A new point interception frame for estimating cover of
vegetation. Vegetatio
50:185-186.
This
paper describes construction and use of a simple, widely
applicable point sighting frame that is used for estimating
cover of plants or other entities in a community.
Floyd,
D.A., and J.E. Anderson. 1983.
Baseline vegetation data for a controlled burn site.
Pages 182-197 in
O.D. Markham, editor. Idaho
National Engineering Laboratory Radioecology and Ecology
Programs 1983 progress report.
DOE/ID-12098. National Technical Information Service, Springfield,
Virginia.
An
area was selected to study the response of vegetation to a
prescribed burn at the INEL.
Vegetal cover was estimated by point interception.
Floyd,
D.A., and J.E. Anderson. 1987.
A comparison of three methods for estimating plant cover.
Journal of Ecology 75:221-228.
This
study compared cover estimates, precision, and sampling
efforts for line interception, point interception, and
cover-class estimation in sagebrush steppe.
French,
N.R., and J.E. Mitchell. 1983.
Long-term vegetation changes in permanent quadrats at the
Idaho National Engineering Laboratory Site.
Bulletin No. 36, University of Idaho Forest, Wildlife and
Range Experimental Station, Moscow, Idaho.
In
1975 and 1976, the authors examined 16 permanent quadrats that
had been established between 1955 and 1957.
These plots were established to sample some vegetation
types not sampled by the two main vegetation transects (see
Appendix 1, Part A). The
authors concluded that "Vegetation dynamics of
shrub-dominated communities of the area are complex events
resulting from both long-term successional trends following
disturbances . . . and short-term fluctuations due primarily
to changing seasonal weather patterns."
They also found that "Shrub populations are
relatively stable regardless of perturbations caused by
climate or livestock grazing. It is the understory herbaceous species which respond most to
disturbances, and . . . account for a majority of the
vegetation dynamics in succession and fluctuations.”
Marlette,
G.M. 1982.
Stability and succession in crested wheatgrass seedings
on the Idaho National Engineering Laboratory Site.
M.S. Thesis, Idaho State University, Pocatello.
Study
sites were established in crested wheatgrass stands that were
more than 20 years old. Analysis
of seed reserves and vegetation cover in the crested
wheatgrass sites and in adjacent communities of native species
showed that vegetal cover of dominant species was positively
correlated with their seed reserves.
Seed banks in crested wheatgrass stands were heavily
dominated by crested wheatgrass seeds.
Marlette,
G.M., and J.E. Anderson. 1986.
Seed banks and propagule dispersal in crested wheatgrass
stands. Journal of
Applied Ecology 23:161-175.
Areas
sown with crested wheatgrass were compared with adjacent
native plant communities for plant cover and seed bank
composition. Propagules
of native species in the seeded areas were sparse, indicating
that stand stability may be a consequence of dominance of the
seed bank by crested wheatgrass, rather than direct
competition for resources.
Pearson,
L.C., and S.K. Rope. 1987
Lichens of the Idaho National Engineering Laboratory.
DOE/ID-12110. U.S.
Department of Energy, Idaho Operations Office, Idaho Falls,
Idaho.
This
report lists 111 lichen taxa that occur at the INEL.
A key to the lichen species and a general description
of the genera are included.
Shumar,
M.L. 1983a.
Factors affecting the distributions of two subspecies of
big sagebrush. Pages
172-181 in O.D.
Markham, editor. Idaho
National Engineering Laboratory Radioecology and Ecology
Programs 1983 progress report.
DOE/ID-12098. National Technical Information Service, Springfield,
Virginia.
The
study examined the relationships between distributions and
habitat characteristics for two subspecies of Artemisia
tridentata, ssp.
wyomingensis and ssp. tridentata. Distributions
of the two subspecies were related to a gradient of soil
texture.
Shumar,
M.L. 1983b.
Sagebrush distributions on the Idaho National Engineering
Laboratory. Pages
157-161 in O. D.
Markham, editor. Idaho
National Engineering Laboratory Radioecology and Ecology
Programs 1983 progress report.
DOE/ID-12098. National Technical Information Service, Springfield,
Virginia.
Sagebrush
samples were collected within 25 m of roads and trails on the
INEL. Samples
were identified to species and subspecies using morphological
characteristics and ultraviolet spectrophotometry.
Three species of
Artemisia and two subspecies of A.
tridentata were identified.
A map of the distribution of these species and
subspecies is included.
Shumar,
M.L., and J.E. Anderson. 1986a.
Gradient analysis of vegetation dominated by two
subspecies of big sagebrush.
Journal of Range Management 39:156-160.
Vegetal
cover and soil parameters were analyzed for areas having pure
and mixed stands of Artemisia
tridentata ssp.
tridentata and ssp. wyomingensis.
Distributions of the subspecies were associated with
soil texture.
Shumar,
M.L., and J.E. Anderson. 1986b.
Water relations of two subspecies of big sagebrush on
sand dunes in southeastern Idaho.
Northwest Science 60:179-185.
This
study compared plant and soil water potentials among dune
tops, dune margins, and areas between dunes.
Plant water potentials of Artemisia
tridentata ssp. tridentata
and ssp. wyomingensis were different only when soil water potentials
associated with each subspecies were also different.
Sirotnak,
J.M. 1990.
Intraspecific and interspecific competition in Leymus cinereus and Chrysothamnus
nauseosus in a cold desert community.
M.S. Thesis, Idaho State University, Pocatello, Idaho.
Intraspecific
competition in Leymus cinereus and interspecific competition between L.
cinereus and Chrysothamnus
nauseosus in a sagebrush steppe were examined through
competitor removal experiments. L. cinereus had competitive effects on both
conspecifics and C. nauseosus,
but C. nauseosus
had little effect on L.
cinereus.
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