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1 October 2006 Evolution and origin of the Central Grassland of North America: climate, fire, and mammalian grazers
Roger C. Anderson
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Grasslands are a widespread vegetation type that once comprised 42% of the plant cover on earth's surface. Features commonly shared among grasslands are climates with periodic droughts, landscapes that are level to gently rolling, high abundances of grazing animals, and frequent fires. World-wide expansion of grasslands occurred 8 to 6 MaBP and was associated with increasing abundance of grasses using the C4 photosynthetic pathway, a decline in woodlands, and coevolution of mammals adapted to grazing and open habitats. Beginning with Transeau's seminal paper on the prairie peninsula in 1935, North American ecologists debated the relative importance of fire and climate in determining the distribution of grasslands. In the 1960's, a major research interest was the response of prairies to fire, especially the productivity of burned and unburned grasslands. Understanding mechanisms for increased productivity on burned prairies began in the late 1960's and continued into the middle 1980's. During the past 20 to 25 years, grassland research has focused on the coevolution of grasses and mammalian grazers and fire-grazing interactions that affect habitat heterogeneity and diversity across trophic levels. While this paper does not follow a chronological development of our understanding of grasslands, all of these major research interests are considered.

Roger C. Anderson "Evolution and origin of the Central Grassland of North America: climate, fire, and mammalian grazers," The Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 133(4), 626-647, (1 October 2006). https://doi.org/10.3159/1095-5674(2006)133[626:EAOOTC]2.0.CO;2
Received: 13 November 2006; Published: 1 October 2006
KEYWORDS
bison
C4 grasses
Central Grassland
fire
grasslands
keystone species
mammalian grazers
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