If Mike Baranski could time-travel back to 16th century Rowan County, one of his first
stops would be High Rock Lake. Few parts of Rowan have undergone a more dramatic habitat change than High
Rock, the Catawba College biologist says.
The best way to understand the
magnitude of the change is to visualize how the site looks now compared to 400 years ago:
If you see a huge man-made lake
like High Rock, Baranski says, you can assume that its over what was once a
bottomland forest. Iwould have liked to have seen the original land under High Rock Lake.
I imagine the forest there would have been huge and spectacular.
Bottomland forests, such as the
one that probably stood at High Rock, typically produced the largest hardwood trees among
North Carolinas old-growth forests. Some of those trees would have been
gigantic, maybe four, five, six feet in diameter, Baranski says.
In the late 20th century, such
trees are a rarity in the Piedmont. Boones Cave State Park in Davidson County is one
of the few areas in the Rowan area where some large old-growth trees survive, Baranski
says.
Its really, really
hard to find old hardwood, bottomland forest, especially that hasnt been cut,
he says.
Many hardwood trees would have
routinely reached over three feet in diameter in precolonial times, he says. Common
hardwoods were oaks, cottonwoods, sycamores and ashes.
In the days when Spanish explorers
crisscrossed the Southeast, pine trees now a fixture of the Piedmont landscape
accounted for a small percentage of Piedmont acreage. Pines became the dominant
tree in much of the Piedmont only after European settlers began clearing vast sections of
hardwood trees to create farmland in the 1700s, followed by the abandonment of many farms.
In 20th century Rowan, the forests
are tremendously fragmented compared to conditions in precolonial times, Baranski says.
Near Barber, in western Rowan
County, lies another site Baranski would like to visit if he could travel back four
centuries. There, he would look for two once-prominent habitats:
n Areas of grassland known as
Piedmont prairie, which provided breaks in the areas large expanses of
hardwood trees.
n Upland depression swamps, where
the clay soils often kept moisture on the lands surface.
Small numbers of buffalo
actually, woodland bison grazed there. A buffalo wallow near Youngs
Mountain in western Rowan continues today as one of the fragments of that once-significant
ecosystem.
Many European explorers left
written records describing the Piedmont prairie in parts of the old Southeast. The
accounts of the Juan Pardo expedition of the 1560s mention that the Piedmont contained
very large and good plains ... clear land.
John Lawson, an English explorer,
described the grasslands found in the Rowan area in 1701. He wrote that while approaching
the Sapona Indian village at Trading Ford, his party journeyed about 25 miles over
pleasant savanna ground, high and dry, having very few trees upon it, and those standing
at a great distance apart. ...
A man near Sapona may more
easily clear 10 acres of ground than in some places he can clear one.
The Rev. Jethro Rumple made a
similar point in his 1881 history of Rowan County. One longtime resident, Rumple wrote,
claimed that when his father had settled in Rowan around 1750, the region was
destitute of forests. That early pioneer farmer, Rumple wrote, had to haul the
logs for his house more than a mile.
The Barber area also has remnants
of the former wetlands called upland depression swamps. Both the prairies and the wetlands
appeared in Barber because of the particular nature of the soil there. In the 1990s, all
that remains of those former ecosystems, in many cases, is an isolated plant here and
there.
In studying those areas, Baranski
is pursuing what he calls an ecological detective story, trying to unravel the
mysteries behind these forgotten parts of Rowan Countys landscape. Right now
were only looking at fragments and pieces and trying to put them together and
imagine what they were like, he says.
A third area the Catawba biologist
would like to see in its precolonial condition is in eastern Rowan. In the days of Juan
Pardos 1567 visit to Rowan, small plants clung to granite outcroppings and spread
across the slaterock soil, forming a unique habitat.
A lot of plants are special
to these places, Baranski says. These are some of our rarest places now, from
a plant point of view.
The plants have largely
disappeared now as timbering and quarrying operations have proliferated and because
we have suppressed the natural occurrence of wild fires.
Fire played an enormously
important role in shaping the destinies of plant life in precolonial Rowan, Baranski says.
Because modern society places such importance on containing fires, the notion that fire
can be beneficial might seem hard to grasp. But in precolonial days, fire whether
caused by lightning or by Indians produced ecological cycles that were quite healthy
for the habitat.
Different ecosystems
depended on fire some more and some less, Baranski says. Prairies are
areas where fire is a very important component. Without fire, hardwoods take over.
Indians, writes Lawrence Barden, a
biologist at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, have lived in
thePiedmont region of the Southeastern United States for 12,000 years. They burned the
forest to improve hunting, to facilitate travel and, for the last 1,500 years, to clear
fields for agriculture.
When a fire would break out
back then, Baranski says, it would go for a long ways. It may have burned
thousands and thousands of acres before it ended.
Once fires became a rarity, the
landscape inevitably changed. The forest slowly crept onto the grasslands. First, the
bison and elk disappeared from the Piedmont prairie. Soon thereafter, so did the prairie
itself. |