1 / 12

Coastal Grasslands Management

Coastal Grasslands Management. “How to Cheat at Land Management”. Coastal Grasslands Management. Land management. Did not begin with the Europeans The historic extent of California’s grasslands, in particular, may be fairly anthropogenic

jerzy
Download Presentation

Coastal Grasslands Management

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. Coastal Grasslands Management “How to Cheat at Land Management”

  2. Coastal Grasslands Management Land management • Did not begin with the Europeans • The historic extent of California’s grasslands, in particular, may be fairly anthropogenic • May also have impacted species composition (fire-tolerant species) • Humans have been in relationship with this land for a long time

  3. Coastal Grasslands Management Land management • Has a goal • Can be aligned with protecting biodiversity, maintaining or re-establishing ecological processes, maintaining rare ecosystems, etc.

  4. Coastal Grasslands Management How to “Cheat” • Have a goal • Know what your land looks like now • Know what success looks like • Know how to measure it • Ongoing monitoring/management

  5. Coastal Grasslands Management Figuring out what’s on your land • Problematic species you need to address • Native species you want to preserve • “The best and the worst”

  6. Coastal Grasslands Management How to figure it out • Looking from a high point • Changes in color, structure, “look” of vegetation • Utilizing other people on the property (e.g. researchers, stewards, hikers) • Using aerial imagery (esp. for cover type conversion) • Historic information • Mapping

  7. How to tell if something might be invasive: • It’s establishing a monoculture • You never noticed it before (caveat: it could be something rare; it could be responding to unusual weather or other conditions)

  8. It’s lining trails or roads, but you don’t see nearly as much of it if you step off the beaten path • You know from neighbors, local RCD, or state lists that a particular species is a problem (caveat: for highly invasive species only)

  9. Coastal Grasslands Management How to identify your best and worst • Find narrowest (comprehensive) species list for your area • Taxonomic sufficiency: identify to coarsest useful taxonomic level • Visual identification (GISS and field marks) • But look at whole plant. Know family characterstics! • Vegetative characteristics • Practice (weekly refreshers)

  10. Mapping with Volunteers • 10 – 15 species • Invasive perennial grasses • Any other invasives of special concern • Native perennial grasses • “Other Native Perennial Grass” category • Caveat: unusual rushes, sedges • Caveat: “new” perennial invasive (e.g. Festucaarundinaceaon SSU’s Fairfield Osborn Preserve)

  11. Coastal Grasslands Management Land Management • Have a goal • Know what your land looks like now • Know what success looks like • Know how to measure it • Ongoing monitoring/management

  12. Coastal Grasslands Management Management Information • Fire Effects Information System: fs.fed.us/database/feis/ • USDA Plant Fact Sheets and Guides: plants.usda.gov/java/factSheet (DO NOT use for Phalarisaquatica) • Calflora plant profiles and Calflora Observer app: calflora.org • Local Resource Conservation District office

More Related