Page 39 - Interp Book
P. 39

Mapped Type Name   Brief Description              Area (HA)       Percent

 This type is mapped in broken landscapes associated with weathering of sedimentary rocks where patches or
 layers of gyp are common in the landscape.  Small (10 sq m to 200 sq m), open, sparsely vegetated patches or
 layers of gyp on slopes are common. Short and mid-grasses such as sideoats grama, blue grama, hairy grama,
 little bluestem, cane bluestem, sand dropseed, and annual bromes are also common.  Forbs common in the
 Canyon: Gyp   modern landscape include broom snakeweed, common broomweed, stiff greenthread, Navajo tea, Indian   67,378.6   0.372%
 Grassland
 breadroot, stemmy four-nerve daisy, sundrops species, and western ragweed.  Important shrubs may include
 skunkbush sumac, lotebush, mesquite (within range), and Mohr shin oak.  Succulents such as soapweed yucca,
 pricklypear, and Christmas cactus may be present.  Pinchot's juniper, or less commonly, eastern redcedar may be
 present.


 This type is mapped on prairie soils across much of the state, and ranges from relatively dense woodlands to more
 Ruderal Eastern   open shrublands where eastern redcedar is a significant component.  Common woody components vary by region,
 Redcedar Woodland   and may include hackberry species, winged elm, other elm species, green ash, other ash species, honeylocust,   62,994.0   0.348%
 and Shrubland
 black locust, western soapberry, lotebush, post oak, and Osage orange.

 Crosstimbers: Post   This type is mapped on slopes >20% and composition is similar to Crosstimbers: Post Oak Forest, although these
 Oak - Blackjack Oak   stands tend to have more canopy and more often contain older trees.  Common components include post oak,   62,940.2   0.348%
 Slope Forest   blackjack oak, black hickory, black oak, green ash, winged elm, redbud, and rough dogwood.
 This type is over or near sandy soils, but not mapped on deep sands.  Components of the High Plains: Sand Prairie
 High Plains: Sandy
 Deciduous   such as sand sagebrush, soapweed yucca, Chickasaw plum, little bluestem, sand dropseed, sand lovegrass,   59,790.8   0.330%
 sandburs, western ragweed, field brome, cheatgrass, and Bermudagrass are common. However, components
 Shrubland
 associated with deep sands such as sand bluestem and giant sandreed are generally lacking.
 Pine Plantation - 1 -   This type consists of young pine plantations that were not mature enough to be clearly dominated by pines at the   59,106.0   0.326%
 3 meters   time of data collection (circa 2012).
 High Plains:   This type is mainly represented by successional shrublands or young woodlands in the modern landscape.
 Bottomland   Species such as black willow, Chickasaw plum, winged elm, winged soapberry, plains cottonwood, green ash,   53,997.1   0.298%
 Deciduous   honeylocust, Siberian elm, willow species, and elm species may be present.
 Shrubland
 This type is mapped over prairies soils of western Oklahoma, and may contain a wide variety of shrubs and
 patches of trees that increase under grazing pressure.  This may is species such as soapweed yucca, sand
 Ruderal Plains   sagebrush, white sagebrush, tree cholla, Chickasaw plum, Siberian elm, sugar hackberry, and soapberry.    53,648.6   0.296%
 Shrubland
 Herbaceous species common include broom snakeweed, plains broomweed, and short grasses such as grama
 species, sand dropseed, and brome species.




















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