Grasses and Forbs
The name Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is fitting but it can be deceiving. Though many species of grass here do grow taller than most people standing upright, there are also short grasses and several other different categories of plants found on the preserve.
Most native prairie flowers are classified as forbs. Forbs are defined as "any herbaceous plant growing in its native habitat except grasses and grass-like forms". Herbaceous plants are non-woody vegetation with succulent leaves and stems.
Collectively, there are nearly 400 different types of plants found on the preserve, The greater mass of these plants exist in the form of long tentacled roots that reach deep under ground resembling an upside-down subterranean forest.
Scientists and researchers from around the world come to study this amazing and important prairie ecology. They recognize these grasses and forbes as the cornerstone of an important environmental "sink". It is here that the powerhouse of prairie plant life is stored allowing this hearty ecosystem to regenerate despite fire, grazing, flood and drought.
This "sink" removes tons of carbon from the atmosphere. This balance of life both below and above ground has given the Tallgrass Prairie ecosystem a resilience that has survived nearly 10,000 years of climatic change.
KANSAS WILDFLOWERS AND GRASSES