Loading…

Establishing soil and surficial geologic habitat criteria for presumed gypsophiles — The example of Eriogonum corymbosum var. nilesii, Mojave Desert, U.S.A

Detailed soil and surficial geologic data are needed for ecological interpretations, yet are often absent or incomplete in published studies of arid land ecology or biogeography. Clear, edaphic habitat definitions are needed for gypsophilic plants including the Las Vegas buckwheat, E. corymbosum var...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Catena (Giessen) 2014-07, Vol.118 (118), p.9-19
Main Authors: Robins, Colin R., Buck, Brenda J., Williams, Amanda J.
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Detailed soil and surficial geologic data are needed for ecological interpretations, yet are often absent or incomplete in published studies of arid land ecology or biogeography. Clear, edaphic habitat definitions are needed for gypsophilic plants including the Las Vegas buckwheat, E. corymbosum var. nilesii (LVB), a rare shrub endemic to the Mojave Desert. As a case study, we use soil profile data and high resolution (1:3000 scale) surficial geologic maps to identify likely edaphic controls of LVB habitat, potential habitat, and non-habitat distributions. We confirm gypsiferous substrates lacking hard, physical surface crusts as a boundary condition in most, but not all population clusters, but find that fine-grained, carbonate-rich soil lacking gypsum is also viable habitat, as is shallow (1m), coarse-grained alluvium and/or surfaces with tightly interlocking desert pavement exclude LVB. Our results challenge the view of this target species as a true gypsophile, however, it remains unclear whether carbonate-rich habitats represent ideal conditions or refugia. This study underscores the important merits of surficial geologic mapping and soil morphological description for ecological research, conservation, restoration, and land management in arid environments, especially gypsum soils, worldwide. •High-resolution surficial geologic mapping improves floristic habitat definitions.•Soil and surficial geologic data must be obtained to confirm gypsophily.•Eriogonum corymbosum Bentham var. nilesii (Reveal) (LVB) may not be an obligate gypsophile.•LVB habitats or refugia include carbonate rich, low gypsum soils.•LVB habitat excludes deep/coarse alluvium and tightly interlocking desert pavement.
ISSN:0341-8162
1872-6887
DOI:10.1016/j.catena.2014.01.017