1 / 32

BL / ENVS 448 Plant Biodiversity and Ecology

BL / ENVS 448 Plant Biodiversity and Ecology. Plant Communities of the Rocky Mountains. What are plant communities?. Often defined by major plant species / types Temperature and precipitation prevail Altitude determines the above Several types in Colorado

sampson
Download Presentation

BL / ENVS 448 Plant Biodiversity and Ecology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BL / ENVS 448 Plant Biodiversity and Ecology Plant Communities of the Rocky Mountains

  2. What are plant communities? • Often defined by major plant species / types • Temperature and precipitation prevail • Altitude determines the above • Several types in Colorado • From lowest (and hottest) to highest (and coldest)

  3. Desert and semi-desert • Mainly canyon country in the western part of the state • Less than 14 inches of rainfall • 4,000 to 6,500 feet in elevation • Lower areas dominated by shrubs like rabbitbrush and sagebrush • Higher areas dominated by Pinyon Pine and Juniper

  4. Rabbit brush and Pinyon Pine

  5. Moving on up - Grasslands • Dominated by grasses • 3,500 to 6,500 feet • More precipitation (about 20 inches) • Eastern third of Colorado • Can still find some sagebrush and rabbitbrush and cactus, but many more mixed grasses • Tall grass and short grass in Colorado

  6. Grasslands

  7. Bouteloua sp. Grasslands

  8. Big Will and Will J. in tallgrass

  9. Prickly Pear amongst the grasses

  10. Foothills • Includes mesa tops • 6,500 to 8,500 feet • Ponderosa pine, still some pinyon and juniper • Oak thickets (we only have one Gambel’s) • Mountain mahogany • 14 to 25 inches of precipitation

  11. Foothills

  12. Inspiration Point – sagebrush and P.J.

  13. Will J. enjoying the foothills

  14. Bobcat in the foothills

  15. Montane • Forest • Mixed conifer and aspen (most wide ranging tree in U.S.) • 8,000 to 10,000 feet • Understory vegetation is mostly shrubs • Willow shrubs in riparian areas • 18-30 inches of precipitation • ¼ to ½ as snowfall

  16. Montane Forests

  17. Pentaphylloides floribundaaka Rocky Mountain Cinquefoil

  18. Penstemon whippleanus

  19. Aquilegia caerulea

  20. Subalpine • Thick spruce/fir forests • Aspens only in lower elevation here • 25-40 inches of precipitation a year • Last zone before alpine

  21. Hard at work in Breckenridge

  22. More hard work in the montane /subalpine

  23. Mertensia ciliatamountain bluebell

  24. Castilleja rhexifolia X miniataIndian paintbrush

  25. Chaemerion danielsii

  26. Alpine • Alpine tundra (not arctic tundra) • Dwarf shrubs, herbs, and cushion plants • Above treeline (about 11,500 feet in CO) • 30-55 inches of moisture • Most as snowfall

  27. Above the trees

  28. Big horn sheep

  29. Eritrichium aretoidesalpine forget-me-not

  30. Gentiana parryi - Parry’s gentian

  31. Silene acaulis – moss campion

  32. TROPICAL ALPINE Azorella compacta

More Related