Native American Burning Key to Rare Oak Savannas

White Oak field research (麻豆传媒团队/Keith Walters '11)

White Oak field research (麻豆传媒团队/Keith Walters '11)

In a recent article in Annals of the American Association of Geographers, geographers from the State University of New York (SUNY) found that Native American land use鈥攊n particular, the use of fire鈥攚as critical in shaping the distribution of oak savannas in Western New York at the end of the 1700s.

Assistant Professor Stephen Tulowiecki and Professor David Robertson, both at 麻豆传媒团队, along with from the University at Buffalo, compared information gleaned from historical sources in order to map oak savannas and to better understand how both environmental conditions and Native Americans influenced their distribution around 1795.

The distribution and causes of oak savannas鈥攅cosystems comprised of widely spaced trees (predominately oak) and prairie grasses鈥攈ave long been debated and studied by geographers and ecologists. 鈥淥ak savannas may have been the product of environmental conditions, specifically dry soils and dry climate,鈥 Tulowiecki said. 鈥淥r, oak savannas may have resulted from Native Americans, who used fire to thin out the forest to create areas for hunting or to make travel easier.鈥

The 鈥渢hinly timbered鈥 savannas were a unique ecosystem to find in Western New York (WNY) and the Eastern U.S., Tulowiecki notes, 鈥渂ecause the dominant land cover was closed-canopy forests.鈥

Why Oak Savannas Are Important

Oak savannas are a globally endangered ecosystem. 鈥淲e have maybe five good remnant locations of oak savannas, also known as oak openings, in New York State,鈥 Tulowiecki said. 鈥淎nd within those ecosystems, there are rare plants. These landscapes are also beneficial for wildlife.鈥

They are also cultural landscapes鈥擭ative Americans maintained them for various reasons.

Tulowiecki said these spaces are essential reminders that the Americas were humanized鈥攖he landscape had been altered鈥攂efore the Europeans arrived. 鈥淚f you look at American mythology, you鈥檒l hear again and again that this was a pristine wilderness, and it鈥檚 not true. This research counters that myth,鈥 he said.

The researchers鈥 article 鈥,鈥 showed that three to six percent of the landscape in WNY was oak savanna. 鈥淲e have historical evidence that Native Americans were burning it and maintaining it as an open landscape鈥攐therwise with the absence of fire it would revert to forest.鈥

Research Methodologies

In the hope of better understanding how different conditions affected these ecosystems, the geographers mapped historic oak savannas in WNY using two approaches.

First, the team used geographic information systems (GIS) software to map the location of oak savannas using original land survey records from the late 18th century.

鈥淪urveyors described oak savannas as 鈥榯hinly timbered鈥 oak landscapes, 鈥榦ak openings,鈥 or other similar terms,鈥 Tulowiecki said. Looking for these keywords made the process of sifting through the handwritten records a bit easier.

The researchers then compared the locations of oak savannas with environmental conditions such as temperature, precipitation, soil pH, and soil moisture levels, and to the locations of Native American settlement. 鈥淲e developed quantitative models to predict the location of oak savannas as well as to assess the relative importance of environmental conditions and Native American settlement,鈥 Tulowiecki said.

Second, the researchers examined more than 100 historical texts鈥攊ncluding county histories and travel journals鈥攊n search of reports of Native American land use, like controlled burning and agricultural clearings.

鈥淭here was surprisingly good agreement between where land surveyors indicated oak savannas existed and where the records from early settlers and travelers suggested they existed,鈥 Tulowiecki said. 鈥淎nd places where the models suggested that oak savannas were caused by Native American land use were confirmed by the historical accounts, too.鈥

For some areas, like around 麻豆传媒团队, the study suggests that oak savannas were maintained mainly due to Native American burning. Overall, the models in the study imply that Native American land use and environmental conditions were equally influential in shaping the distribution of oak savannas.

鈥淭hese oak openings were only occurring in drier conditions but also close to Native settlements; it鈥檚 sort of 50/50鈥攂ut really, virtually every place that we鈥檝e mapped oak savannas we have some description of fire or burning,鈥 Tulowiecki confirmed.

A grant from the National Science Foundation supported the research.

Author

Monique Patenaude, PhD
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