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Cave Seed Study
Restoration of vegetative cover is required after ground disturbing
activities in the Park, with the majority of these from human causes.
In the past, park employees have planted commercially grown seed
mixes of native grass species in order to restore vegetative cover.
In many instances, the success of reseeding has been low, resulting
in the need to investigate this need. As a result, the Wind Cave
Seed Study came to life. The study is a cooperative (USGS and NPS)
three-year research project that started in 2004 with the intention
of defining a better native seed mix for the local area and the
feasibility of collecting native seed from within the park for use
in future restoration projects.
During the 2004 field season, the “seed study girls”
gathered baseline data on success/failure of commercial mix by establishing
200 permanent plots on a fairly recent seeding done on the Wind
Cave waterline. The plots were paired with one plot being located
in the disturbed, seeded area and a control plot was located just
off the waterline in the undisturbed area.
The control
plot allowed the researchers to determine the potential natural
vegetation that could be expected for the local soil and site types
prior to the disturbance. The plots were read twice, once during
late spring and again in late summer. Two readings allowed a more
extensive inventory of both cool and warm season species. The second
major task of 2004 was to collect and clean seed from 48 native
species to plant in test plots in the mixing circle. Head researcher,
Amy Symstad of USGS developed eight different seed mixes, and planted
half the test plots in December, assisted by Marie Curtin.
The 2005 seed study team, Helen McGranahan and Leigh Stansfield,
began the field season by mixing and measuring the seed for spring
planting of the test plots. Since each species has it own germination
requirements (stratification, scarification or surface sowing),
multiple bags of seed were used during the May planting process!
In mid-May, they began to gather data on what was beginning to grow
in the test plots.
Since the only treatment was scraping the ground with a grader prior
to planting, there was a tremendous dormant seed bank of exotic
and native species that were emerging by the time data gathering
began. Differentiating between planted and on site species continues
to be a challenge for the team. Prior to starting data collection
the team did an intensive literature search to find pictures and
identifying characteristics of seedlings expected in the plots.
Seedling information and pictures for most native species in the
Northern Great Plains is minimal. The above image is a prickly pear
seedling.
Data collection
included mapping, photographing, and counting seedlings, plus estimating
cover of both seeded and volunteer species. The team finished the
first round of data collection on the mixing circle plots in early
July, re-read the waterline plots in July, then re-read the mixing
circle plots in August and September. That’s a lot of staring
at little plants!
Time was also
required for watering with thanks given to volunteer Tom McBride
for help. Thanks also to Sabrina Henry and Jim Dahlberg for help
in developing a self- contained water system. Watering plots may
have seemed silly to some folks, but if certain species failed to
grow, lack of water would not be a factor to consider as cause.
As year
two of the study winds down, the study team is busy inputting stacks
of data in the computer, labeling and cataloging pictures and developing
a web page to help other resource managers identify native and exotic
plant seedlings.
New Cave Inventory Database
Our summer volunteer, Tom McBride, was able to write a program that
allows the entry of cave inventory data into an Access database.
Cave inventory data is feature data that is associated with individual
survey stations in Wind Cave (including speleothems, geological,
biological, hydrological, and cultural features). Because contracting
this project to someone with Tom’s programming skills would
have cost us over $24,000, it would have been difficult to accomplish
this without his volunteer services.
Using Visual Basic, Tom wrote 710 lines of program that allows us
to enter ranges of survey data into a single field. His program
then takes those ranges and enters each station and associated features
individually into a single line (the computer does all of the hard
work for us in a couple of seconds). His program also allows us
to enter text into a comment field for stations that have unusual
features.
We had attempted
to accomplish this same project with other computer-savvy folks
within the previous six years, but each of those attempts created
duplicate data and produced forms that were very laborious for data
entry. Tom’s program has reduced the time it takes to enter
a single inventory sheet from approximately 30 to seven minutes!
In addition to the program, he was able to remove all of the duplicate
data from the database. This has reduced the number of stations
in our database from 23,000 to 13,000, giving us accurate data.
We are now in
the process of entering all of the backlog data that has accumulated
in the previous six years (about 350 sheets) and all of the comments
from cave inventories conducted between 1991 and 1998. Once the
backlog data is automated, we will be able to use GIS to query the
database. We will undoubtedly learn many things about Wind Cave
that we never suspected. In the future, we will be able to prevent
accumulating backlog inventory data by entering new data at the
same time that we enter survey data into the COMPASS software. If
you are interested in seeing the new program, stop by Rod Horrocks
office for a demonstration.
Comments and
feedback about Resource Ramblings are encouraged and can be made
to Dan Foster, in person, or via email.
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