923. Absence of forest encourages serious floods.—The great floods of the Mississippi and its tributaries are due to the rapidity with which heavy rainfall flows from the rolling prairies of the west, and from the deforested areas west of the Alleghany system. The serious floods in recent years in some of the South Atlantic States are in part due to the increasing area of deforestation in the Blue Ridge and southern Alleghany system.
924. The prairie and plains societies.—These are to be found in the grassland formation. In the prairies “meadows” are formed in the lower ground near river courses where there is greater moisture in soil. The grasses here are principally “sod-formers” which have creeping underground stems which mat together, forming a dense sod. On the higher and drier ground the “bunch” grasses, like buffalo-grass, beard-grass, or broom-sedge, etc., are dominant, and in the drier regions as one approaches desert conditions the vegetation gradually takes on more the character of the desert, so that in the plains sage-brush, the prickly-pear cactus, etc., occur. Besides the dominant vegetation of the society there are subordinate species, and the societies are especially marked by a spring and autumn flora of conspicuous flowering plants which are mixed with the grasses.
925. Desert societies.—These are composed of plants which possess a form or structure which enables them to exist in a very dry climate where the air is very dry and the soil contains but little moisture. The true desert plants are perennial. The growth and flowering period occurs during the rainy season, or those portions of the rainy season when the temperature is favorable, and they rest during the very dry season and cold. Characteristic desert plants are the cacti with thick succulent green stems or massive trunks, the leaves being absent or reduced to mere spines which no longer function in photosynthesis; yuccas with thick, narrow and long leaves with a firm and thick cuticle; small shrubs or herbs with compact rounded habit and small thick gray leaves. All of these structures conserve moisture. The mesquite tree is one of the common trees in portions of the Sonora Nevada desert. Besides the true desert plants, desert societies have a rainy-season flora consisting of annuals, which can germinate, vegetate, flower, and seed during the period of rain and before the ground moisture has largely disappeared, and these pass the resting period in seed.
Fig. 490.
Desert vegetation, Arizona, showing large succulent trunks of cactus with shrubs and stunted trees. Open formation. (Photograph by Tuomey.)
Fig. 491.
Polar tundra with scattered flowers, Alaska.
(Copyright by E. H. Harriman.)
Fig. 492.