A Legacy of Change: Historic Human Impact on Vegetation in the Arizona Borderlands

A Legacy of Change: Historic Human Impact on Vegetation in the Arizona Borderlands

by Conrad Joseph Bahre
A Legacy of Change: Historic Human Impact on Vegetation in the Arizona Borderlands

A Legacy of Change: Historic Human Impact on Vegetation in the Arizona Borderlands

by Conrad Joseph Bahre

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Overview

The arrival of Anglo settlers in the 1870s marked the beginning of major vegetation changes in southeastern Arizona, including an increase in woody plants in rangelands, the degradation of riparian wetlands, and the spread of non-native plants. While many of these changes have already been linked to human land-use through comparative photographs and historic descriptions, it has long been presumed that changes in the region's climate have also contributed to vegetation change.

Geographer Conrad Bahre now challenges the view that these vegetation changes are due to climatic change. Correlating his own field research with archival records and photographs, Bahre demonstrates that most of the changes follow some type of human disturbance, such as cattle grazing, fuelwood cutting, wildfire suppression, agriculture, and road construction. Indeed, all available evidence suggests that Anglo settlement brought unprecedented changes to the land.

Vegetation change in the American West has long been an issue of concern. This careful scrutiny of one corner of that region—one of the most ecologically diverse areas of the United States—shows how poorly understood is the relationship between human activities and vegetation. More important, it introduces new techniques for differentiating between natural and anthropogenic factors effecting vegetation change that can be used to help ecologists understand vegetation dynamics worldwide.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780816536399
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Publication date: 12/01/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 231
File size: 39 MB
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About the Author

Conrad J. Bahre is a professor of geography at the University of California, Davis. He is also the author of Destruction of the Natural Vegetation of North-Central Chile.

Table of Contents

Contents List of Illustrations List of Tables Foreword Acknowledgments Part I. Historic Vegetation Change 1. Introduction 2. Setting 3. Previous Studies of Vegetation Change 4. Assessing Vegetation Change Part II. Primary Historic Human Impacts Since 1870 5. Livestock Grazing 6. Fire 7. Fuelwood Cutting 8. Exotic Plant Introductions 9. Agriculture, Logging, and Haying 10. Patterns and Factors of Change 11. Summary and Conclusions Appendix A. Selected Section Lines with Oaks Recorded by the Public Land Survey in Southeastern Arizona Appendix B. Tree and Large Woody Shrub Counts Along 111 Matching Transects on SCS (1935-1937) and NHAP (1983-1984) Imagery by Vegetation Type Appendix C. Z-Scores for the Total Sample Notes Bibliography Index
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