Everything about Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem totally explained
Greater Yellowstone is the last remaining large, nearly intact
ecosystem in the northern
temperate zone of the
Earth and is partly located in
Yellowstone National Park. Conflict over management has been controversial, and the area is a flagship site among conservation groups that promote ecosystem management. The Greater Yellow Ecosystem (GYE) is one of the world's foremost natural laboratories in
landscape ecology and
geology and is a world-renowned recreational site. It is also home to the
animals of Yellowstone.
History
Yellowstone National Park boundaries were arbitrarily drawn in 1872 in hopes of including all regional
geothermal basins in the area. No other landscape considerations were incorporated. By the 1970s, however, the
grizzly bear's (
Ursus arctos) range in and near the park became the first informal minimum boundary of a theoretical Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem that included at least 16,000 km² (4,000,000 acres). Since then, definitions of the greater ecosystem's size have steadily grown larger. A 1994 study listed the size as 76,890 km² (19,000,000 acres), while a 1994 speech by a Greater Yellowstone Coalition leader enlarged that to 80,000 km² (20,000,000 acres).
In 1985 the
United States House of Representatives Subcommittees on Public Lands and National Parks and Recreation held a joint subcommittee hearing on Greater Yellowstone, resulting in a 1986 report by the
Congressional Research Service outlining shortcomings in interagency coordination and concluding that the area's essential values were at risk.
Other federally managed areas within the GYE include
Gallatin,
Custer,
Caribou-Targhee,
Bridger-Teton and
Shoshone National Forests, as well as the
National Elk Refuge and
Grand Teton National Park. The GYE also encompasses some privately held lands surrounding those managed by the U.S. Government. Outside of Yellowstone National Park, ten distinct
wilderness areas have been established in the
National Forests since 1966 to ensure a higher level of habitat protection than is normally mandated.
Ecosystem Management by Species
The great ecosystem concept has been most often advanced through concerns over individual
species rather than over broader ecological principles. Though 20 or 30 or even 50 years of information on a population may be considered long-term by some, one of the important lessons of Greater Yellowstone management is that even half a century isn't long enough to give a full idea of how a species may vary in its occupation of a wild ecosystem.
For example, anecdotal information on grizzly bear abundance dates to the mid-1800s, and administrators have made informal population estimates for more than 70 years. From these sources, ecologists know the species was common in Greater Yellowstone when
Europeans arrived and that the population wasn't isolated before the 1930s, but is now. Researchers don't know if bears were more or less common than now.
A 1959-1970
bear study suggested a grizzly bear population size of about 175, later revised to about 229.
(External Link
) Later estimates have ranged as low as 136 and as high as 540; the most recent is a minimum estimate of 236.
(External Link
) Although the Greater Yellowstone population is relatively close to recovery goals, the plan's definition of recovery is controversial. Thus, even though the population may be stable or possibly increasing in the short term, in the longer term, continued
habitat loss and increasing
human activities may well reverse the trend.
Yellowstone cutthroat trout (
Oncorhynchus clarki bouvieri) have suffered considerable declines since European settlement, but recently began flourishing in some areas. Especially in
Yellowstone Lake itself, long-term records indicate an almost remarkable restoration of robust populations from only three decades ago when the numbers of this
fish were depleted because of excessive harvest. Its current recovery, though a significant management achievement, doesn't begin to restore the species' historical abundance.
Early accounts of
pronghorn (
Antilocapra americana) in Greater Yellowstone described
herds of hundreds seen ranging through most major
river valleys. These populations were decimated by 1900, and declines continued among remaining herds. On the park's northern range, pronghorn declined from 500-700 in the 1930s to about 122 in 1968. By 1992 the herd had increased to 536.
Among
plants,
whitebark pine (
Pinus albicaulis) is a species of special interest, in large part because of its seasonal importance to grizzly bears, but also because its distribution could be dramatically reduced by relatively minor
global warming. In this case, researchers don't have a good long-term data set on the species, but they understand its ecology well enough to project declining future
conservation status. A more immediate, and serious, threat to whitebark pine is an introduced
fungal disease,
white pine blister rust (
Cronartium ribicola), which is causing heavy mortality in the species. Occasional resistant individuals occur, but in the short to medium term, a severe population decline is expected.
Estimates of the decline of
quaking aspen (
Populus tremuloides) on the park's northern range since 1872 range from 50% to 95%, and perhaps no controversy underway in Greater Yellowstone more clearly reveals the need for comprehensive interdisciplinary research. Several factors are suspected in the
aspen's changing status, including
Native American influences on numerous
mammal species and on
fire-return intervals before the creation of the park in 1872; European influences on fire frequency since 1886; regional
climate warming; human harvests of
beaver and
ungulates in the first 15 years of the park's history and of
wolves and other
predators before 1930; human settlement of traditional ungulate migration routes north of the park since 1872; ungulate (especially
elk) effects on all other parts of the ecosystem since 1900; and human influences on elk distribution in the park.
The Yellowstone hot springs are important for their diversity of
thermophilic bacteria. These bacteria have been useful in studies of the evolution of
photosynthesis and as sources of thermostable
enzymes for
molecular biology. Although the smell of
sulfur is common and there are some sulfur fixing
cyanobacteria, it has been found that
hydrogen is being used as an energy source by
extremophile microbes.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem'.
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