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Historical Irrigation Leaves Long-Lasting Legacies On The Prairie

Historical Irrigation Leaves Long-Lasting Legacies On The Prairie

A hallmark of environmental science is understanding how ecosystems respond to global change. Much of this research focuses on short-term ecosystem responses, such as how an ecosystem responds to a sudden onset of drought. But previous conditions can modify that response. In the same way a formative childhood experience might change how an adult responds to stress, legacy effects can change the direction or magnitude of ecosystem responses to disturbance.

A study at the U.S. National Science Foundation-supported Konza Prairie Long-Term Ecological Research site modified a 25-year irrigation experiment to show that historical irrigation patterns determined the sensitivity of carbon cycling to drought. The results suggest that long-term legacies play a significant role in how an ecosystem responds to short-term stress. The findings were published in Global Change Biology.

"Soil is a living ecosystem that doesn't soon forget conditions from years ago," says Doug Levey, a program director in NSF's Division of Environmental Biology. "Today's droughts and fires may severely alter the trajectory of tomorrow's grasslands and forests."

Researchers at Konza Prairie LTER began irrigating a long strip of prairie in the 1990s. Initially, they wanted to study how avoiding drought might change the ecosystem, from  to soil nutrient availability.

After 25 years of consistent irrigation, the researchers had what they needed from the initial experiment. They shifted course and reversed treatments for several experimental plots. Historically irrigated sites were suddenly thrown into a simulated drought. The scientists also induced drought at several control sites, which had natural precipitation for the initial 25-year experiment.

The transition allowed researchers to look for legacy effects: persistent effects of long-term environmental conditions, in this case ample water, that affect how an ecosystem functions in the face of new environmental stress.

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We cover: today I am so excited to share this conversation with my buddy Eric Nordell of Beech Grove Farm in Pennsylvania to chat about, well, a lot of things. Eric and his wife Anne have run beech grove farm since 1983 and they do things a little differently (like farming with horses) but they dry farm which we discuss, they use some cover crops in the paths in interesting ways (also discussed) and in fact, we get into a whole digression about their deer fencing that you’re gonna wanna hear.