Name:
Rhus trilobata Moist Wet Shrubland
Reference:
NatureServe Biotics 2019
Description:
This mesic to wet shrubland association is known from western Colorado, Utah and southern Idaho. <i>Rhus trilobata</i> often forms tall, dense, and nearly impenetrable thickets with 30-98% cover. Associated shrubs can sometimes be codominant, but no single species has consistently high cover or constancy across the range of the association. Associated shrubs include <i>Celtis laevigata var. reticulata, Clematis ligusticifolia, Cornus sericea, Ericameria nauseosa, Ribes aureum, Rosa woodsii, Salix exigua, Salix lasiolepis, Salix lutea, Shepherdia argentea</i>, and <i>Toxicodendron rydbergii</i>. Saplings of <i>Populus fremontii, Populus angustifolia</i>, or <i>Salix amygdaloides</i> may be present. Total understory herbaceous cover and diversity are low, and herbaceous species are often confined to shrub canopy gaps. <i>Bromus tectorum</i> and <i>Galium aparine</i> are the most frequently occurring species, but native species such as <i>Elymus canadensis, Equisetum</i> spp., <i>Hordeum jubatum, Muhlenbergia asperifolia, Leymus cinereus, Pascopyrum smithii</i>, and <i>Phragmites australis</i> are sometimes also present. Forb associates include <i>Apocynum cannabinum</i> and <i>Artemisia ludoviciana</i>. Non-native species are common in disturbed stands. Stands occur in both mesic to wet riparian and non-riparian situations. Throughout its range, the association occurs at low to mid elevations (701-1676 in Idaho and 1555-2000 m in Colorado), most often along mid-order to large rivers, but also in narrow canyons of small creeks and intermittent drainages. This association often forms linear bands above the high-water line on steep shorelines, along rocky toeslopes at cliff bases, on benches, and in intermittent arroyos, usually where there is minimal floodplain development. Stands also occur on rocky hillsides in association with springs and seeps emanating from canyon walls. In broad river bottoms, stands occur in the floodplain on second terraces between older <i>Populus</i> spp. forests on upper terraces and <i>Salix exigua</i> shrublands next to the river. In these large floodplains, habitats are in flux with stream meanders, channel downcutting, and sediment deposition; sites where this shrubland persists are generally too dry for the establishment of <i>Populus</i> and <i>Salix</i> spp. Substrates are well-drained, fine silty clay to sandy loam soils overlying coarse alluvium, bedrock or talus.
Accession Code:
urn:lsid:vegbank.org:commConcept:30030-{5E1A3840-6273-44EA-BB70-23A0FB3603FB}
Plot-observations of this Community Concept:
0
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