| Is doing a plant inventory like looking
at the trees, not the forest? Is it a matter of counting blades of grass?
Or is it more like looking for a needle in a haystack? How, when it comes
down to it, do working scientists actually inventory a site? We asked a
botanist who specializes in rain forest trees and an ecologist whose work
often involves looking at entire habitats how they go about the task.
Brian Boom, the tree specialist, who is
now Vice President for Botanical Science and the Pfizer Curator of Botany
at the New York Botanical Garden, told us, “I usually study trees in tropical
lowland forest areas, but most of the principles apply anywhere.” Brian
works in hectares--10,000-square-meter units--and you will be working in
4-square-meter units, but in either case, the first step is to mark out
the plot. “Your plot can be an absolute square or a longer, narrower shape,”
he said. The shape of the plot might be determined by what the scientist
wants to find out or by what the terrain requires. For example, Brian said,
“You will pick up more diversity with a long, narrow plot because you are
going through more microhabitats.” On the other hand, in some areas, such
as a mountain summit, “I'd fall off the edge if I didn’t measure my plot
with an eye toward the topography.”
After you have measured the plot, mark
the perimeter with colored flagging. You can write on the flags with permanent
marker. Brian said that biodegradable flagging is available from forestry
supply houses. If you use flagging that is not biodegradable, be sure to
remove it when your study is over. “Then I start systematically going through
the site, dividing it into subplots and working my way through, measuring,
collecting, and taking observations of each plant that meets my size class
criteria.”
Dividing a plot into smaller
subplots is an excellent strategy, especially if the plants you are inventorying
are smaller than trees. Liz Johnson, Manager of Metropolitan Biodiversity
Programs at the American Museum of Natural History’s Center for Biodiversity
and Conservation, typically inventories 300-acre plots, so subdividing
is absolutely necessary.
She told us about trying to count individual
plants of a species of ground cover that grew in a twisted mat throughout
a site. “It was so dense and had so many offshoots that it was really impossible
to do a count. Instead, we made a grid within the plot and tried to count
the number of individual plants within a single square.” She suggested
getting down on your hands and knees and looking for the place where the
plant comes out of the ground. Then multiply the number of plants within
a single square by the number of squares in the entire plot that are filled
by the plant. ”Another way is to estimate percent of coverage. This works
for grasses, some ferns, and other ground cover plants.”
The grid also helps you move through your
plot in a systematic way, Liz said. “You just have to start at a particular
point and count.” Each team member could take one or several subplots,
or each team member could take certain types of plant or plants of a particular
height, and work through the entire plot counting only those plants. “Concentrate
on what you’re doing and try not to lose track,” she advised.
Liz agrees that counting plants can seem
impossible, particularly if you have limited time. The best thing, she
said, is to break the job into parts and then set priorities. “Think about
how much time you have for each session and how frequently you can come
back, and then decide what to do first, second, and so on. You may have
to work very fast if you have only one or two sessions, or if the season
is changing and you have to do the inventory before certain things disappear.”
Otherwise, start with the most important things and then, if you have time
or can make another visit, do as much of the rest as you can manage.
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