Plant-and-Animal Communities (continued)
Groves and Grasslands: The Prairie Sea
There is something about spring on the prairie that
gets me up before dawn. I like to watch the seasons change their guard
over the landscape, from the wintry cold of pre-dawn dark to the
spring-scented morning air to the hot summer-foretaste of the noon May
sun.
Hoarfrost surrounds these patches of pasqueflowers,
blue goblets on downy stems. On this windless night, frost has formed
everywhere, reclaiming for a time its vast winter range, sparkling over
the green handiworks of spring.
But the god of the growing grasslands is the sun, and
it now proclaims itself, stretching out to make the mountains shine.
With its assault the frost collapses, becoming bright beads on grass tip
and leaf joint by which a beetle might refresh itself.
Spring is best perceived ant-level, at its ground
beginnings, where the bright yellow-green tips of new grass shoots
reclaim the winter-blighted land, I look closely at a drag line of
spider silk; a necklace of dewdrops slides down, collects to a moment's
greatness, in which I briefly see a curved horizon, the morning
sunburst, and myself, before it falls away.
Getting up from my prone position, my belly damp from
the prairie earth, I startle a whitetail jackrabbit; bounding high, it
zig-zags off. The commotion disturbs a distant badger, which faces about
from its diggings to confront danger in whatever form it might take. It
swings its snout to scent the air. Somewhat uncertainly, it returns to
the business of hunting, then hesitates, swings about once more and
waits, myopic, patient.
Satisfied at last, the spurt of the now distant
rabbit lost in its brain, the creature snorts a defiance at the mystery
and resumes its morning gopher hunt.
Overhead a marsh hawk skims past, its flight erratic
as a butterfly's. Far away a magpie rattles at the passing hawk and
takes flight, briefly flashing black and white.
It is easy to see only pieces in the natural
puzzlea badger throwing dirt, horned larks dipping into wind,
black ants dragging the rosette of a dead spiderand be satisfied
with the scattered scenes. But at last, to make it meaningful, we must
complete the picture. There is that special joy in discovering larger
schemes: green plants utilizing sunlight; a rabbit building its days at
the plants' expense; the falcon tearing the rabbit meat for its young;
magpies picking at the fallen falcon; and then, in the end, all
returning to the earth.
Here on the prairie, as in every plant-and-animal
association, the ancient drama repeats itself over and over; the distant
tundra is a drastically different stage with different actors, but the
cycle is the same. Life depends upon the interaction of all its many
forms. Unseen bacteria are as necessary to the land as green grass; the
meadow vole and the coyote are as much a part of the prairie as the
grasses.
The secret of life rests in the wonder of
photosynthesis. Only green plants can manufacture food from the earth's
raw minerals. This is the vital first step upon which the great pyramid
of animal and plant life is built. Using energy from the sun, green
plants combine water and carbon dioxide to synthesize sugar, and give
off oxygen as a by-product. The caterpillar takes its energy from the
plant tissue, converting to protein the sugar and minerals in its body.
The caterpillar is then food for a spider or other predator. A yellow
warbler may take the spider and in turn be ambushed by the prairie
falcon. Thus the energy produced by the plant travels through the food
chain. When the prairie falcon dies, scavengersincluding insects
and other invertebrates, birds, and mammalsredistribute its wealth
among themselves; the rest is decomposed by bacteria. Thus, eventually,
the nutrients on which the plants depend return to the soil.
When we look at any living organism, whether it is
plant, herbivore, carnivore, parasite, scavenger, or decomposer, we are
soon made aware of its associations with other living things, each
puzzle piece leading us to another and another. We begin to see a
picture wholethe fox, meadow mouse, grasshopper, bunchgrass, and
sparrow hawkall interlocked.
Geologically speaking, grasslands are a recent
development. As the Rocky Mountains were being uplifted, the prevailing
warm, moist climate began to change. The rising mountain mass
intercepted moisture-laden winds that blew in from the Pacific, creating
a rain shadow that lengthened eastward as the mountains rose higher. A
continental climate, characterized by severe winters and dry, wildfire
summers gradually took shape, extinguishing the great forests that had
grown across the continent's interior. Herbaceous plants, which had been
evolving amid the forests, inherited the land.
Unlike trees, grasses die back to the ground each
winter, hoarding their life-germ beneath the protecting soil. Growing
not from the tip but from the joints, grasses regenerate quickly after
fire or grazing. Suspension of the normal metabolic processes enable the
grasses to go dormant and thus survive periods of severe heat and
drought.
Although the great prairie sea washes up against
Glacier's eastern boundary, with estuaries probing into the mountain
valleys on the drier, south-facing slopes, the grassland community
comprises less than 5 percent of the land area of Glacier National Park.
This includes the puddles of prairie west of the Divide that interrupt
the dense coniferous forests along the North Fork of the Flathead
River.
From the pasqueflowers that bloom in early May to the
asters and goldenrod of September, these summer-long gardens of grasses
and flowers lean with the wind. Here are timothy, oatgrass and the
bunchgrassesrough fescue, bluebunch fescue, and bluebunch
wheatgrass. Among the grasses bloom bitterroot, blue camas, lupine,
gaillardia, balsamroot, cinquefoil, sticky geranium, and wild rose.
Conspicuous also are many insectsincluding
grasshoppers; flies; ants, wasps and bees; butterflies and moths; bugs;
and beetleswhich fulfill important roles as herbivores,
carnivores, and scavengers while also acting as pollinators for
flowering plants and providing an abundant food source for other
animals.
Below the ground are the tunnels. Burrowing is an
important means of survival on the open prairie, and life underground is
extensive. Some of the animals are rarely seenthe northern pocket
gopher, for example, with a diet of underground insects, grubs, worms,
and roots, spends most of its life tunneling just below the surface.
Others, like the badger, leave their burrows during the day to dig for
rodents. Most conspicuous of the burrowing animals in the park's
grasslands is the Columbian ground squirrel. Its alert upright stance
has earned it the nickname "picket pin." When danger approaches from the
air or on land, its shrill alarm whistle passes the warning to others of
its kind.
Where prairie and forest meet, a never-ending
struggle for dominion is waged. The isolated patches of prairie that dot
the North Fork Valley near Polebridge hold the great forest of the
park's northwest region at bay.
This broad valley, floored with coarse glacial
outwash and terraced downward to the deep channel of the North Fork
River, presents a graphic battleground between grass and tree. Lining
the upper terraces, from which they glower down on the dry, well drained
grass flats like a line of warriors, are the Douglas-fir, western larch,
and ponderosa pine. Seedling trees continually invade the prairie. But
most perish early, their shallow roots no match for the extensive root
systems of the fast-growing, moisture-greedy grasses. If encouraged by a
series of wet summers, however, the young lodgepoles quickly gain
stature. They had made significant inroads at Big Prairie when the
disastrously dry summer of 1967 killed most of these 15-year-old pioneer
trees.
These North Fork grasslands and the immediately
surrounding lodgepole pine forests are an important spring range. Deer,
wapiti, and grizzlyand, in the wetter areas, moosegraze or
browse here. And here, low on the western slopes of the Livingston
Range, are the park's only stands of ponderosa pine, a tree that prefers
warm, dry habitats. As a result, at low elevations it often merges with
the prairie community.
Groves of aspen colonize the eastern prairies in
areas where there is sufficient water and protection from wind. These
aspen parklands are important havens for animals. Wherever two differing
communities interact, a phenomenon known as "edge effect" occurs. Here
wildlife exists in abundance; the animals that favor forest cover mingle
freely with those that prefer open areas. Aspen grovessupporting
grasses, herbs, and shrubs beneath their thin canopiesare favored
haunts for grouse, varying hare, deer, and wapiti, all of which find
among the trees abundant food, shelter and concealment. Populations of
insects, small mammals, and birds, which are high for the same reasons,
attract a wide range of predators.
Isolated aspen groves are characteristically
dome-shaped. Because aspens are capable of reproducing themselves
vegetatively, the grove slowly expands outward from the parent tree. As
a result, most of these groves are either exclusively male or
exclusively female.
Since quick-growing aspens provide a bountiful food
source for beaver, streams near these trees are often dammed by the
rodents flooding lowlands and creating additional habitat in the form of
willow flats. Another "edge effect" is established, attracting animals
found near water. Waterfowl, marsh birds, moose, mink, muskrat, skunks,
amphibians, and many others find such areas to their liking.
Before the appearance of the white man, these eastern
prairies were a paradise for animals. Once, on the summit of Rising
Wolf, light-headed from the climb and the view of endless prairie, I
fancied that I saw that vast, undisturbed animal panorama spread before
me.
Principally there were the bison, darkening the
uneven land. Pronghorn bands flashed white on ridgetops, and moose moved
through the long fingers of willow that extended eastward with the
rivers. Caribou and wolves inhabited the shadows. Among vast cities of
prairie dogs, swift fox and grizzly roamed. There were the clamorings of
sandhill crane, and white clouds of trumpeter swans.
This land, endowed with a wealth of wild grass, wore
its wilderness well.
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