Fjölrit RALA - 05.12.1999, Side 130

Fjölrit RALA - 05.12.1999, Side 130
128 BIOMASS AND SOIL NUTRIENT POOLS IN NEWZEALAND shrubby vegetation formed scrub or heath; where it was open, shrubland. Only in situations where topography offered no refuge ffom recurrent fire for woody plants were grasslands free of shrubs. The varied density and stature of shrubs at the onset of pastoralism may have reflected differences in lapse of time since the last fire. Early European explorers of the interior frequently met conditions which required fíre to allow easy passage. For the high country pastoral settlers of the late 1850s, fire was often essential for access with new flocks of sheep, especially because of scrub and the great mass of vegetation. Following initial depasturing of animals, pastoralists soon leamed the use- fulness of fíre to aid the management of grazing (Butler 1862). Buchanan (1868), fresh from his earlier experience in Marlborough (Buchanan 1867), wamed against buming in dry districts of Otago. Thousands of hectares at a time of tall tussock grassland or scmb were burned in the first decade of pastoral occupation. Scmb was often slow to recover, whereas over most of their natural range tall tussocks recovered readily from fíre. ff, however, grazing pressure after buming was sufficiently sus- tained, pastoral impact often achieved the transformation of such tall tussock grass- lands to short tussock grasslands, usually of Festuca and Poa communities. Festuca novae-zelandiae and Poa colensoi became the most abundant tussocks of induced short tussock grasslands in montane and lower subalpine zones of interior subhumid and humid districts from Southland to North Canterbury. Although this primary conversion of dense tall tussock grasslands to more open, shorter grasslands more suitable as pasturage, was the conscious work of managed pastoral impact, and was recorded by early surveyors (O’Connor 1986), the dramatic nature of this early transformation was not properly appreciated by scientists until relatively recent times. The careful phytosociologic analyses of Connor (1964, 1965) indicated derivation of many short grassland communities from tall tussock Chiono- chloa grasslands, dominated by C. flavescens, C. macra, C. rigida, C. rubra, or C. pallens. Until that revelation, opinions of resident and visiting scientists generally fa- voured the interpretation that climate, especially summer droughtiness, controlled the distribution of short grasslands. For nearly a century, there is little suggestion in the writings of any naturalist or scientist of any awareness of this early vegetation transformation. It is evident fforn the descriptions of the grasslands in Otago by Petrie (1883, 1912) and by Leonard Cockayne (1899) in Canterbury that any major transformation of tall tussock grass- lands to short grasslands must have occurred in the early years of pastoral settlement. Under the combined influence of grazing by rabbits since 1870s and sheep which reached their maximum by late 1880s, unimproved rangeland began to decline in live- stock carrying capacity. Analyses of local histories and of statistical records of live- stock and land use (O’Connor and Kerr 1978, O’Connor 1980, 1982, 1986, O’Connor and Harris 1992) have established that livestock numbers on unimproved rangeland generally reached their peak within 25 years of its first pastoral occupation, oscillated for a decade or more, and thereafter declined. Such declines were especially large and sustained in drier regions. This feature has been demonstrated (Harris and O’Connor 1998) especially in drier sectors of the Mackenzie Country, even though Mackenzie County as a whole had not shown serious decline.
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