Even to the untrained eye, it is evident that the basic short-grass pattern has been modified by the shape of the land and by the Niobrara River. In the stream valley, along the tributaries, and on shaded north-facing slopes, the shortgrass community is mixed with taller grasses. If a dry cycle began, the short grasses would take over the whole area by migrating downslope from the exposed prairies. Of interest is the fact that over-grazing by either domesticated or wild animals will have the same effect as a dry period in that taller grasses will be replaced by short ones.
Let’s examine the five communities present today so we can appreciate the complexity of relationships between living things and the earth upon which they depend.
First, we can begin in the Niobrara River itself. The river’s water-dwelling plant inhabitants include algae, which grow underwater.
Between the river and the dry ground is a second community—the marsh—which is often more wet than dry. The marsh has its own characteristic plant association. Most familiar are the cattails, mints, and willows, but just as important ecologically are arrowleaf, rush sedge, marshweed and blue verbena. These are moisture-loving plants that thrive on being thoroughly soaked during the wet part of the year.
Beyond the marsh on the valley floor is a third community. Here the water table (the top of the saturated soil and rock zone) is close enough to land surface that the plants can easily send their roots down into the saturated zone. Here, in what the plant ecologists call the “sub-irrigated floor plain” we find a mid-grass community. Eighty-five percent of the vegetation is slender wheatgrass. Its wheat-like heads may, under favorable conditions, grow to a height of one meter (three feet). At Agate it is seldom over knee high. Kentucky bluegrass takes care of another 10 percent of the plant population. Imported from Europe as a pasture grass in the 1600’s, it spread so rapidly that it often beat the settlers onto new land as they moved westward. The remaining five percent includes imported redtop and such native grasses as switchgrass, foxtail barley, little bluestem, prairie cordgrass, and inland saltgrass. Wildflowers such as Flodmon thistle, yarrow, heath aster, salsify, and blue-eyed grass complete the community.
Moving farther away from the stream, we rise up onto terraces within the valley. These terraces represent levels where the stream paused in its downcutting and cut sideways for awhile. At a drier level, on deep, well-drained sandy soils, they support the fourth or mixed-grass community.
No exotics have yet appeared in this plant community. The grasses include prairie sandreed, sand bluestem, blue grama, needle-and-thread grass, and Indian ricegrass. Wildflowers include the prominent phlox, penstemon, and lupine. Unwelcome (to man and his grazing animals) is Astragalus, the selenium-concentrating plant better known as loco weed. The brittle prickly pear and spiderwort cactus are found here too.
At higher levels in the terrace community, slightly steeper slopes and shallower soils cause some change in this mixed-grass assemblage. Here the dominant grasses are little bluestem, threadleaf sedge, needle-and-thread grass, and blue grama. Lupine disappears, and common pricklypear becomes the only cactus. In this community is found the yucca, its flowers a beautiful soft yellow in season and its spiny leaves painful at any time of the year. Avoid this plant; yucca spines break off under the skin and soon cause irritating festers. The yucca moth, often seen flying around the yucca seed pods, lays eggs in the plant’s lemon-sized fruits. Inside the fruit are long rows of flattened, wedge-shaped seeds. When the yucca moth eggs hatch into caterpillars, they eat their way through the seeds, killing them. On the other hand it is the yucca moth with its long tongue that is solely responsible for pollinating the yucca flower! If you find a yucca fruit in early summer, you can (elsewhere than in the park) slice through it and see the caterpillars at work.
On the high bluffs and overgrazed terraces is the fifth community, the short grass. This community too can be divided into two slightly different parts. The bluffs support blue grama grass, needle-and-thread grass, and Sandberg blue grass. Flowers and shrubs include Eriogonum, brittle pricklypear cactus, pepperweed, penstemon, broom snakeweed, fringed sagewort, and yucca. The other part of this community, the overgrazed terraces, have threadleaf sedge, needle-and-thread grass, and blue grama. Except for the familiar penstemon, all the flowers are restricted to this community. Gronwell, menzania, and bee plant are indicators of overgrazing.
Certain cyclical variations are characteristic of these plant communities. First, the shortgrass and mixed-grass areas ebb and flow with changing moisture conditions from year to year. Second, grass populations change with the seasons. Cool-season grasses (foxtail barley, Indian rice grass, Kentucky bluegrass, needle-and-thread grass, Sandberg blue grass, and slender wheatgrass) flourish during spring and fall. During the warm summer the blue grama, inland saltgrass, little bluestem, prairie cordgrass, prairie sandreed, and switchgrass predominate. This natural adaptation to seasonal conditions uses the greatest potential of the growing season and at the same time provides species that will flourish in both wet and dry cycles.