MEADOW
(Redirected from Meadows)

A 'meadow' is a habitat of rolling or flat terrain where grasses predominate. Typically, what is called a meadow has more biodiversity than a grassland as the former contains not only grasses but a significant variety of annual, biennial and perennial plants.
A transitional meadow occurs when a field, pasture, farmland, or other cleared land is no longer farmed or heavily grazed and starts to overgrow. Once meadow conditions are achieved, however, the condition is only temporary because the early colonizers will be shaded out when woody plants become well-established.
In North America prior to European colonization, Algonquian, Iroquois and other Native American people regularly cleared areas of forest to create transitional meadows where deer could find nutrition and be hunted. Many places named "Deerfield" are located at sites where Native Americans once practiced this form of land management.
A perpetual meadow is one in which environmental factors restrict the growth of woody plants indefinitely. For example:
★ Alpine meadows occur at high elevations and are maintained by harsh climatic conditions
★ Coastal meadows are maintained by salt sprays
★ Desert meadows are restricted by low precipitation
★ Prairies are maintained by periods of severe drought and are subject to wildfires
★ Wet meadows are semi-wetland areas saturated with water throughout much of the year.
In English agriculture, the term meadow implies periodic mowing for the production of hay, whereas "pasture" is a more general term and tends to be reserved for grassland directly grazed by livestock.
★ Coastal plain
★ Field
★ Flooded grasslands and savannas
★ Flood-meadow
★ Grassland
★ Pasture
★ Plain
★ Plateau
★ Prairie
★ Rangeland
★ Savanna
★ Steppe
★ Tundra
★ Water-meadow
★ Wet meadow
★ Veld
★ Cornell University
★ The Washington Post, "Today, 32,000 seedlings; tomorrow, a meadow"
★ Meadow Planting

Quamash meadow near Bovill, Idaho
A 'meadow' is a habitat of rolling or flat terrain where grasses predominate. Typically, what is called a meadow has more biodiversity than a grassland as the former contains not only grasses but a significant variety of annual, biennial and perennial plants.
| Contents |
| Transitional meadows |
| Perpetual meadow |
| Usage in England |
| See also |
| References |
| External links |
Transitional meadows
A transitional meadow occurs when a field, pasture, farmland, or other cleared land is no longer farmed or heavily grazed and starts to overgrow. Once meadow conditions are achieved, however, the condition is only temporary because the early colonizers will be shaded out when woody plants become well-established.
In North America prior to European colonization, Algonquian, Iroquois and other Native American people regularly cleared areas of forest to create transitional meadows where deer could find nutrition and be hunted. Many places named "Deerfield" are located at sites where Native Americans once practiced this form of land management.
Perpetual meadow
A perpetual meadow is one in which environmental factors restrict the growth of woody plants indefinitely. For example:
★ Alpine meadows occur at high elevations and are maintained by harsh climatic conditions
★ Coastal meadows are maintained by salt sprays
★ Desert meadows are restricted by low precipitation
★ Prairies are maintained by periods of severe drought and are subject to wildfires
★ Wet meadows are semi-wetland areas saturated with water throughout much of the year.
Usage in England
In English agriculture, the term meadow implies periodic mowing for the production of hay, whereas "pasture" is a more general term and tends to be reserved for grassland directly grazed by livestock.
See also
★ Coastal plain
★ Field
★ Flooded grasslands and savannas
★ Flood-meadow
★ Grassland
★ Pasture
★ Plain
★ Plateau
★ Prairie
★ Rangeland
★ Savanna
★ Steppe
★ Tundra
★ Water-meadow
★ Wet meadow
★ Veld
References
★ Cornell University
★ The Washington Post, "Today, 32,000 seedlings; tomorrow, a meadow"
External links
★ Meadow Planting
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