Page 247 - Interp Book
P. 247

No.
                                                                           No.      Ground
                                                                         Original     truth
 Mapped Type Name   Brief Description   Area (HA)   Area (AC)   Percent   Samples   Samples

 This type is mapped at the highest elevations of the Ouachita Mountains in Latimer and
 Ozark-Ouachita:   LeFlore counties. Gnarled white oaks often dominate the sites, with post oak, blackjack
 Montane Stunted                 426.2          1,053.2       0.002%            0          0
 Oak Woodland   oak, black hickory, and mockernut hickory also present.  Other woody components
 include white fringetree, hophornbeam, common serviceberry, and Blue Ridge blueberry.



 This type circumscribes broad variation, but in the modern landscape most
 representatives are grazed pastures.  Common species are non-native and grazing
 tolerant grasses and forbs such as Bermudagrass, tall fescue, annual ragweed, field
 Ozark-Ouachita:   brome, purple top tridents, sericea lespedeza, prairie broomweed, and sneezeweed.    388,110.5   959,040.4   2.144%   129   10
 Pasture/Prairie   Less heavily grazed areas may support grasslands with species such as little bluestem,
 big bluestem, and yellow Indiangrass.  Woody species such as post oak, black walnut,
 common persimmon, winged elm, sumac species, and eastern redcedar may be
 components.

 These areas were essentially unvegetated during all seasons at the time of data
 Ozark-Ouachita:
 Riparian Barrens   acquisition (circa 2012), and may represent river-scoured islands, riverbeds, and stream   58.6   144.9   0.000%   0   0
 edges.
 This type is mapped along first and second order streams within narrow buffers, and is
 Ozark-Ouachita:   represented by vegetation influenced by a variety of water regimes and human impacts.
 Riparian Deciduous   Stream gradient tends to be relatively high, and species such as hazel alder, river birch,   2,242.3   5,540.9   0.012%   0   0
 Shrubland and   willow species, sycamore, and oaks may grow near steep banks or adjacent to stream
 Young Woodland
 bed cobble.

 This type is mapped along first and second order streams within narrow buffers, and
 Ozark-Ouachita:   shortleaf or loblolly pine (mainly Ouachitas), or eastern redcedar (mainly Ozarks), may
 Riparian Evergreen   be the prevailing dominant.  Other species such as sycamore, river birch, sweetgum,   16,113.1   39,816.3   0.089%   5   0
 Woodland and   maples, oaks, and hazel alder may grow near steep banks or adjacent to stream bed
 Shrubland
 cobble.

 This type is mapped along first and second order streams within narrow buffers, and is
 Ozark-Ouachita:   represented by vegetation influenced by a variety of water regimes and human impacts.
 Riparian Hardwood   Stream gradient tends to be relatively high, and species such as sycamore, river birch,   79,975.7   197,624.0   0.442%   25   2
 Woodland   sweetgum, maples, oaks, and hazel alder may grow near steep banks or adjacent to
 stream bed cobble.

 This type is mapped along first and second order streams within narrow buffers, and
 Ozark-Ouachita:   may circumscribe a variety of herbaceous wetlands.  Common components include
 Riparian Herbaceous   sedge and rush species, spikerush species, cattails, smartweeds, and moist-soil   424.1   1,047.9   0.002%   0   0
 Wetland
 grasses.






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