Thursday, August 11, 2016

More than you might want to know about "barren zones" around bushes (update with additional images)

As I mentioned last week, 

I went back up to the place where I took some of those original pics of the plant-free zone around chaparral bushes.  This place is Black Mountain (37.319795, -122.163153), a mixed oak woodland, chaparral, and grassland.

Overview of barren zone site.  Black Mountain.  Image from Google Maps.

I had speculated that small bushes couldn't provide enough cover to let small critters live within (and therefore wouldn't have a barren zone around them).

I went up there to check.  Here are a few images from my walk up there...

I went to this brush complex (#1 in the map below; just off the trail), and took the closeup photo pointing my camera in the direction of the arrow (and standing at the tip of the red arrow at 37.318673, -122.157772).  This is around 56 square meters in size, and just about the smallest brush complex I could find with a clear barren zone. 

Brush complex #1 from the air

You can see the barren zone here in the closeup, while in the satellite photo, it's only visible on the far side of the brush complex. What's interesting here is that the barren zone is hidden in shadows (in the satellite image), but obviously visible at the time of day when I took this picture.  

Closeup of Brush complex #1


Here's another image, taken just off another giant brush complex not far away.  Look carefully at the image below, you can see this one is large enough to have trees (the dark spots) growing in the center.  (This is brush complex #2 in the map below.)

Brush complex #2 (a large complex around 4 hectares in area).

As you can see, I laid out a tape measure so you can see the width of the barren zone (just over 39" or 1m).  This zone is so wide that it's also used as a deer trail (lots of hoofprints making a clear deer path here).  For some of these barren zones, it seems there's more than just herbivory by small mammals going on, at least at the larger brush complexes.


This closeup was taken on the west side of the large brush complex.  Given the mature size of the brush (a mix of coyote brush chamise and even a few small oak trees in the middle), I'm not surprised that this brush complex shelters more than just rabbits and ground squirrels.  
The above closeup was taken here, on the west side of brush complex #2




And another, this time, a smaller complex. Brush complex #3, shown below, is around 81 square meters.



Here you can see that the barren zone is a little smaller than those of other complexes. This leads me to wonder if the width of the barren zone is a function of the area of the brush complex.    


After looking at a LOT of brush complexes, I noticed that at some point, the brush complex gets too small to even shelter small mammals, and as a consequence, they do NOT have any barren zones.  (See image below.)  

A small coyote bush with no barren zone (too small). Brush complex #5. 

Here's an interactive map of the places I took these images.  (You can zoom in/out and click on a brush complex outline to see the area estimation.)  

Interactive Map of five Brush Complexes. Click on each to see the size of the complex. (The blue drop pin shows the location of complex #1.)  


Summary

My wanderings around on Black Mountain aren't really a substitute for a proper field study.  To do proper science, I'd have to do a lot of field measurements and careful tabulation of my findings.  

But I have to say that I looked at a LOT of brush complexes up there (probably 100 or so), and in NO case did I find a barren zone around a brush complex that was smaller than 10 square meters.  If the allelopathy hypothesis were correct, then you'd expect to see a tiny barren zone... but not nothing

On the other hand,  I did notice a few large brush complexes that didn't have a barren zone--but in all cases, they were on fairly steep slopes.  I hadn't anticipated that, but it fits in with the small mammal herbivory effect causing the barren zones.  Squirrels don't seem to mind a slope, but I suspect that rabbits don't want to be grazing downslope of a brush complex if a predator comes along.  Running uphill isn't a great defensive strategy.  

The big surprise was that so much of this initial work can be done through satellite photos.  The barren zones (at least of the larger brush complexes) is quite visible on Google Maps or Google Earth.  Of course, you still need to go out into the field and validate, but I'm constantly impressed by how much early phase science can be done remotely.  

As always, 

Search on!  


6 comments:

  1. That discovery is neat. I think you have a scholarly paper and enough presentational herbivorous material for a TED talk on this.

    jon

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    1. Thanks Jon. I suspect that's right. There are a couple of other hunches I have about the relationships between small mammals, chapparal, and the geography of the place that would be fun to pursue. If only I had an infinite amount of time!

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    2. Dan, This may help: http://www.fs.fed.us/psw/publications/documents/psw_rp202/psw_rp202.pdf Go to the top right side of page 5 where it mentions "bare-zone"

      Did a search on [chapparal mice] but this also works [chaparral bare zone] and [chaparral bare area]

      CHeers

      j

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    3. Those searches were in Scholar

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  2. seems you might be remotely on vacation… more island ales/Blue Hawaiians…
    uhhh, Dan… maybe Stan likes his zone barren… RUN… (it does appear to be flamingo-free)
    Stan wants to know what's up with the pink birds
    keep an eye out overhead too… Pterodactyls trolling the brush complexes
    plausible virtual evidence for the bunnies & deer (bad day) thesis, but the "birds"– proto-chickens – are problematic… Stan doesn't care for them either…
    "birds" on the trail

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