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Item Early postglacial vegetation development in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem(Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Letters & Science, 2015) Krause, Teresa Rose; Chairperson, Graduate Committee: Cathy Whitlock; Cathy Whitlock was a co-author of the article, 'Climate and vegetation change during the late-glacial/early Holocene transition inferred from multiple proxy records from Blacktail Pond, Yellowstone National Park, USA' in the journal 'Quaternary research' which is contained within this thesis.; Yanbin Lu, Cathy Whitlock, Sherilyn C. Fritz and Kenneth L. Pierce were co-authors of the article, 'Patterns of terrestrial and limnologic development in the northern greater Yellowstone ecosystem (USA) during the late-glacial/early-Holocene transition' submitted to the journal 'Palaeogeography, palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology' which is contained within this thesis.; Virginia Iglesias and Cathy Whitlock were co-authors of the article, 'Climatic and nonclimatic controls shaping early postglacial conifer history in the greater Yellowstone ecosystem, USA' submitted to the journal 'Ecological monographs' which is contained within this thesis.The last glacial-interglacial transition in the western US (20,000-8000 years ago) was a period of rapid environmental change. In the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE), much research has focused on postglacial vegetation changes; however, questions still remain regarding the relative trade-off between climate and nonclimatic factors, such as edaphic conditions, disturbance, and biotic interactions, in driving early postglacial vegetation development at finer spatial and temporal scales in the region. This study reconstructed vegetation development in the GYE from the time of ice retreat to the early Holocene insolation maximum (17,000-8000 years ago) at sub-regional and regional scales using fossil pollen data from three sites in the northern GYE and across a regional network of 13 previously published records. Fossil pollen data from lake sediments were compared to independent measures of climate (paleoclimate model simulations, stable isotope data), edaphic conditions (lithologic and geochemical data), and fire activity (charcoal data) to better understand climatic and nonclimatic drivers of early postglacial vegetation development. Climate was the primary driver of early postglacial vegetation development in the GYE. Increasing summer insolation and its direct effects on summer temperature and effective moisture directed changes in vegetation from pioneering herb and shrub communities to spruce parkland during the late-glacial period to subalpine forest and eventually open Douglas-fir forest by the early Holocene summer insolation maximum. Nonetheless, fire activity, site-specific edaphic conditions, and biotic interactions mediated vegetation responses to climate change. Elevated regional fire activity between 12,500 and 10,000 cal yr BP, driven by increasing summer temperatures and fuel biomass, facilitated important ecosystem changes from an Engelmann spruce and subalpine fir dominated system to one dominated by whitebark and lodgepole pine. Site-specific edaphic conditions, namely erosional processes associated with newly deglaciated terrain, inhibited early conifer expansion, and important competitive interactions between lodgepole pine and whitebark pine after the early Holocene limited the range of whitebark pine at middle elevations in the GYE. This research provides new insight into how ecosystems and plant species have responded to past climate change and is critical for better understanding local responses to regional climate change predicted in the coming decades.Item Succession in riparian communities of the lower Yellowstone River, Montana(Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Letters & Science, 1984) Boggs, Keith WebsterItem Settlement, identity and environment: understanding processes of vegetation change along the Wind River(Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Letters & Science, 2010) Cohn, Teresa Helene; Chairperson, Graduate Committee: William WyckoffContemporary research concerning wildlands and wildlife of the American West increasingly calls for greater complexity in understanding human-environmental relationships. This dissertation investigates a culturally diverse portion of Greater Yellowstone in order to complicate these dialogues. It explores a riparian corridor along the Wind River, a region permanently settled by Eastern Shoshone, Northern Arapaho and Euro-American residents in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Using the Wind River Basin as a case study, this research observes the landscape through three different lenses: settlement geography, place identity, and vegetation change. By incorporating a variety of methods to understand regional change (including historical research, interviews with residents, and comparative aerial and ground photography), it finds that riparian change relates to a complex cultural-ecological mosaic. Not only is change perceived differently by a variety of communities in the Wind River Basin; change relates to century-old settlement geographies, government policies and cultural preferences, shifting economies and power relationships, and evolving relationships formed by interrelationships of people and environment. This dissertation argues that investigations of environmental change must not oversimplify dynamic relationships between people and place. Indeed, the complexity of these places may relate to why Greater Yellowstone has remained one of the largest intact ecosystems in the lower 48 states.