Long‐Term Vegetation Change at a Fully Protected Sonoran Desert Site
- 1 April 1990
- Vol. 71 (2) , 464-477
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1940301
Abstract
To investigate desert vegetation dynamics, I undertook an open—ended study of a site that offers a combination of multiple observations through time with continuous protection from domestic livestock and other human impacts. The site is MacDougal Crater in the Sierra del Pinacate Reserve, Sonora, Mexico. Three sources of data have been used: a series of exactly matched photographs, begun in 1907; detailed permanent—plot maps, dating from 1959—1960; and an age—distribution analysis of a 170—yr—old population of Carnegiea gigantea. The crater vegetation is dominated by the woody perennials Cercidium microphyllum, Encelia farinosa, Prosopis sp., and Larrea tridentata, and the columnar cactus Carnegiea gigantea. Various populations of Larrea tridentata declined 50—90%, and Cercidium declined 60%, during the first half of this century with little or no recruitment since. Carnegiea numbers increased fourfold over the same period. A 200—fold increase in Prosopis in the playa—like crater center occurred in the early 1970s. Elsewhere on the crater floor, Encelia density increased markedly during the same period from insignificant levels in the early 1960s. Age distribution analysis for the Carnegiea population reveals three major establishment peaks during the 1790 period. Recruitment and morality records from the three sources of data are compared with regional climate records. The high mortality for some of the species was probably the result of the prolonged drought during 1936—1964. Establishment surges for some appear related to periods of unusually heavy precipitation during certain seasons. Clearly, desert communities are highly responsive to changes in the climate regime under which they grow.This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Morphology, Nurse Plants, and Minimum Apical Temperatures for Young Carnegiea giganteaBotanical Gazette, 1980
- Creosote Bush: Long-Lived Clones in the Mojave DesertAmerican Journal of Botany, 1980
- A Long-Term History of Drought Occurrence in Western United States as Inferred from Tree RingsWeatherwise, 1975
- Geological Reconnaissance of the Gran Desierto Region, Northwestern Sonora, MexicoJournal of the Arizona Academy of Science, 1973
- The Influence of Shade, Soil, and Water on Saguaro Seedling EstablishmentBotanical Gazette, 1966
- The Saguaro: A Population in Relation to EnvironmentScience, 1963
- Succession in Desert Vegetation on Streets of a Nevada Ghost TownScience, 1961
- Plant Succession in the Larrea‐Flourensia ClimaxEcology, 1940
- Thirty Years of Change in Desert VegetationEcology, 1937
- Changes in Desert VegetationEcology, 1929