HomeAbout

SIGN IN   Advanced Search










 
Browse Geography
Bugs Reveal an Extensive, Long-lost Northern Tallgrass Prairie

This peer-reviewed article from BioScience journal investigates the relationship between leafhoppers and planthoppers and northern tallgrass prairie. Only tiny remnants of unploughed natural meadows remain in the eastern part of the state of North Dakota, and in Canada from eastern Saskatchewan to Manitoba. Those west of Lake Manitoba and the Red River Valley are characterized by their distinctive fauna of insects, principally leafhoppers and planthoppers (Homoptera: Auchenorrhyncha). These true bugs include hundreds of species invariably associated with North American grasslands. The distributions of those with the most limited dispersal abilities reflect long-term patterns of dominance and contiguity of native grass stands in prairies. These bug distributions indicate that bluestem-dominated grasslands in Canada, which usually are under 0.5 meter (20 inches) in height, are equivalent to tallgrass prairie from Illinois. This prairie once extended as much as 400 kilometers (250 miles) northwest of its previously known distribution. These bugs help differentiate tallgrass prairie from sites in southwestern Manitoba and adjacent North Dakota, which are more arid, and from sites east of Lake Manitoba and southward in the Red River Valley, which were formerly oak savanna.

Rate this Resource:
1 = not useful, 5 = very useful

Please be the first to rate this resource.


Subscribe and
View Resource

Classifications


Resource Type: Journal, Journal article/Issue
Audience Level: High school upper division 11-12, Undergraduate lower division 13-14, Undergraduate upper division 15-16, Graduate

Author and Copyright


Authors and Editors: K. G. ANDREW HAMILTON
Publisher: AIBS
Format: text/html
Copyright and other restrictions: Yes
Cost: Yes

Comments


» Sign In or register to post comments.


Collection:
American Institute for Biological Sciences


     
   

SITE MAP | CONTACT | POLICIES

Triple A S National Science Foundation Naitonal Science Digital Library Pathway
Funded by the individual BEN Collaborators and grants from the
National Science Foundation [DUE 0085840 / DUE 0226185 / DUE 0532797 / DUE 0734995]

This website is a National Science Digital Library (NSDL) Pathway.
Copyright © 2010. American Association for the Advancement of Science. All Rights Reserved.