Page 269 - Interp Book
P. 269

No.
                                                                           No.      Ground
                                                                         Original     truth
 Mapped Type Name   Brief Description   Area (HA)   Area (AC)   Percent   Samples   Samples
 This uncommon type may occur in areas of relatively continuous or discontinuous soils,
 Wichita Mountains:   so may be more or less patchy in nature.  Eastern redcedar is the common dominant,
 Eastern Redcedar   and species such as post oak, blackjack oak, netleaf hackberry, gum bumelia, and little   292.5   722.8   0.002%   0   0
 Woodland
 walnut may be components.
 This type includes areas that were essentially barren with exposed igneous rocks in all
 Wichita Mountains:   seasons at the time of data acquisition (circa 2012).  Short grasses and annual forbs   532.8   1,316.6   0.003%   0   0
 Granite Outcrop
 may be present.

 Wichita Mountains:   This type is mapped on slopes >20% and composition is similar to the Wichita
 Low Stature Oak   Mountains: Low Stature Oak Woodland and Shrubland.  Stands tend to be more closed   5,562.2   13,744.4   0.031%   4   3
 Slope Woodland and   with taller individual trees and fewer herbaceous-dominated openings.
 Shrubland

 This type often occurs in shallow soils or in cracks in igneous granite, rhyolite, or gabbro
 Wichita Mountains:   rocks.  The aspect can be patchy with very shallow soils or rocks exposed at the
 Low Stature Oak   surface.  Post oak is the most common dominant, and species such as blackjack oak,   5,741.6   14,187.7   0.032%   2   2
 Woodland and   netleaf hackberry, gum bumelia, and little walnut may be present.  Little bluestem, tall
 Shrubland   dropseed, and short grasses such as buffalograss, blue grama, and hairy grama may be
 important in openings.

 Wichita Mountains:
 Oak - Eastern   This type represents eastern redcedar-dominated woodlands on slopes >20%.  Common   172.7   426.7   0.001%   0   2
 species include netleaf hackberry, post oak, blackjack oak, netleaf hackberry, Shumard
 Redcedar Slope   oak, bur oak, chinkapin oak, American elm, and gum bumelia.
 Woodland
 Wichita Mountains:   This uncommon type contains eastern redcedar among the dominants, together with
 Oak - Eastern   species such as post oak, blackjack oak, chinkapin oak, gum bumelia, netleaf hackberry,   113.8   281.2   0.001%   0   0
 Redcedar Woodland   and little walnut.

 This type is mapped on slopes >20% and composition is similar to the Wichita
 Wichita Mountains:   Mountains: Oak - Eastern Redcedar Woodland type.  Stands tend to be more closed   4,645.0   11,478.1   0.026%   4   2
 Oak Slope Woodland
 with taller individual trees and fewer herbaceous-dominated openings.
 This type most often occurs over relatively continuous soils with few openings, and is
 represented in a variety of land positions.  Post oak is the most common dominant,
 Wichita Mountains:   followed by blackjack oak.  Western occurrences may have netleaf hackberry replacing   6,947.7   17,168.0   0.038%   3   3
 Oak Woodland   post oak as the dominant. Other species may include chinkapin oak, netleaf hackberry,
 gum bumelia, and little walnut.  Species such as bur oak, American elm, pecan, and
 sugar maple may occur in more mesic areas.
                Totals    18,103,050.4     44,733,542.7         100%       3,714       1,146









 232
   264   265   266   267   268   269   270