1 / 43

Russell Smith April 5, 2012

Soils, Hydrology and Vegetation Distribution on a Saline Landscape Hailstone National Wildlife Refuge. Russell Smith April 5, 2012. Hailstone NWR. Billings. Bozeman. Nelson, 2009. Regional Groundwater Salinity Concentrations. Hailstone NWR. Nelson, USFWS 2009. Hailstone Basin.

shika
Download Presentation

Russell Smith April 5, 2012

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. Soils, Hydrology and Vegetation Distribution on a Saline LandscapeHailstone National Wildlife Refuge Russell Smith April 5, 2012

  2. Hailstone NWR Billings Bozeman Nelson, 2009

  3. RegionalGroundwater SalinityConcentrations Hailstone NWR Nelson, USFWS 2009

  4. Hailstone Basin Watershed Area = 12,634 hectares Reservoir Area = 226 hectares Volume = 2,168,461 kiloliters Courtesy Google Maps - Terrain

  5. Elevation of Groundwater USFWS 2009

  6. 1941 1954 1962 1991 2003 Nelson, USFWS 2009 1979

  7. Hailstone Reservoir at 54% Salt - 2003 TDS levels exceeding 500,000 ppm (Seawater ~ 34,000 ppm) Problem Elevated waterfowl and wildlife mortality. Nelson, USFWS 2009

  8. Crop Fallow Saline Seep Google Earth Image, 2011

  9. Saline Seep Development McCauley & Jones, 2005

  10. Non-stress Condition Effects of Salinity on Vegetation Stress Condition Seelig 2000

  11. Problem Elevated salinity & selenium causing severe waterfowl and wildlife mortality. Goals Examine vegetation distribution, landscape position, hydrology and soil chemistry. Compare abiotic conditions with vegetation.

  12. Objectives Select sampling points within transects at various locations at Hailstone Examine vegetation characteristics Measure landscape features Determine hydrology at sample points Examine soil chemistry Identify associations between abiotic conditions and vegetation characteristics

  13. Objective: Vegetation D C B A

  14. Objective: Vegetation

  15. Objective: Vegetation 50 cm x 50 cm (2500 cm2) sampling frame vegetation identified percent cover estimatedfor each species

  16. Objective: Vegetation Species Characterization – Wetland Indicator Status From U.S. USFWS Biological Report 88 [26.9] 1988, Revised 1993.

  17. Objective: Vegetation Species Characterization – Salinity Tolerance Salinity Tolerance Low Medium High USDA Plants Database

  18. Objective: Vegetation Salicornia rubra - glasswort, swamp fireweed USDA Plants Database

  19. Objective: Vegetation Suaeda calceoliformis - seepweed USDA Plants Database

  20. Objective: Vegetation Distichlis spicata – saltgrass USDA Plants Database

  21. Objective: Vegetation Poa pratensis – Kentucky bluegrass Photo: Matt Lavin

  22. Objective: Vegetation

  23. Hydrologic Characteristics Objective 3) Measure indications of hydrology (depth to saturation)

  24. Objective: Hydrology

  25. Objective: Hydrology

  26. Objective: Hydrology

  27. Objective: Soils germinant 0-2 cm 2-5 cm seedling 5-10 cm mature roots 10-20 cm

  28. Objective: Soils

  29. Objective: Soils

  30. Objective: Soils

  31. Synthesize Vegetation Characteristics and Abiotic Condition Objectives 5) Compare vegetation characteristics with abiotic conditions and use data to help refuge managers determine revegetation strategies for soil stabilization

  32. Objective: Synthesis

  33. Objective: Synthesis VEGETATION % Canopy Cover Species Type Point Elevation & Distance to Water Surface EC LANDSCAPE SOILS N-P-K %OM Saturation Depth HYDROLOGY

  34. Summary of Observations • Banded vegetation patterns are representative of unique abiotic conditions at Hailstone. • Soil salinity and saturation are closely linked based on position from water (lake or swale) and depth. • An environmental gradient exists where salinity and soil saturation values are highest closer to the lake and lowest in the upland positions.

  35. Recommendations • Build a revegetation model based on observational data, field scale seeding and planting trials, and soils and hydrologic data from the newly exposed lake bed. • Organize areas on the landscape into planting zones based on elevation, hydrology and soil salinity. Choose a variety of species and forms (seed, plugs and transplants) most suited for the conditions within each zone.

  36. Objective: Synthesis

  37. Thank you! GO RANGERS!!

  38. ~Questions~

More Related