Bluff Hills (74a) The Bluff Hills consist of sand, clay, silt, and
lignite, and are capped by loess deposits often greater than thick. This disjunct region tends to have deeper loess and is steeper, more dissected, and generally more forested than neighboring 74b. The carved loess has a mosaic of microenvironments, including dry slopes and ridges, moist slopes, ravines, bottomland areas and small cypress
swamps. Species with more northern affinities occur far to the south in this region. This combination of northern and southern flora and fauna creates a diverse assemblage of species. While oak–hickory forest is the general natural vegetation type, some of the undisturbed bluff vegetation is rich in mesophytes, such as beech (
Fagus grandifolia) and maples (
Acer spp.). Other common forest trees include sweetgum (
Liquidambar styraciflua), basswood (
Tilia americana), eastern hophornbeam (
Ostrya virginiana), and tulip poplar (
Liriodendron tulipifera), while forests in the southern part of the region contain more southern magnolia (
Magnolia grandiflora), water oak (
Quercus nigra), and Spanish moss (
Tillandsia usneoides). The cool ravines contain some higher gradient streams and areas of
gravel substrate, creating distinct aquatic habitats. Severe erosion has occurred in many parts of 74a, particularly when the soils lack adequate vegetative cover.
Crowley's Ridge Crowley's Ridge, the only portion of the Bluff Hills (74a) ecoregion in Arkansas, is a disjunct series of loess-capped hills surrounded by the lower, flatter
Mississippi Alluvial Plain (73). Crowley's Ridge, with elevations of up to , is of sufficient height to have trapped wind-blown silt during the Pleistocene Epoch. It was formed by the aggregation of loess and the subsequent erosion by streams. The loess is subject to vertical sloughing when wet. Spring-fed streams and
seep areas occur on the lower slopes and in basal areas where
Tertiary sands and gravels, that were never removed by the Mississippi River, are exposed. Soils are generally well-drained; they are generally more loamy than those found in the surrounding
Northern Pleistocene Valley Trains (73b) and
St. Francis Lowlands (73c). Wooded land and pastureland are common; only limited cropland is found in Ecoregion 74a.
Post oak–
blackjack oak forest, southern
red oak–
white oak forest, and beech–maple forest occur. Undisturbed ravine vegetation can be rich in mesophytes, such as beech and sugar maple. Oaks still dominate most of these mesophytic communities. The forests of the Bluff Hills (74a) are usually classified as oak–beech. They are related to the beech–maple cove forests of the Appalachian Mountains; like the Appalachian cove forests, tulip poplar dominates early successional communities, at least in the southern ridge. In Arkansas,
tulip poplar is native only to the Bluff Hills (74a). Shortleaf pine grows on the sandier soils of the northern ridge. , in the Loess Plains
Loess Plains (74b) The Loess Plains ecoregion was once a highly productive agricultural area in Mississippi, although many areas are now in pine plantations or have reverted to a mixed forest landscape. The gently rolling to irregular plains are a contrast to the more dissected bluffs of Bluff Hills (74a). The loess layer tends to be thinner than neighboring 74a, and thins more to the east in the broad transition to the
Southeastern Plains. Streams and rivers tend to be low gradient and murky with silty and sandy substrates; many have been
channelized. Severe erosion in earlier years contributed heavy sediment loads to downstream reaches. In Kentucky, the Loess Plains ecoregion is a productive agricultural area. It is mantled by thick loess and
alluvium and is underlain by weak, unconsolidated
coastal plain sediments. Ecoregion 74b is lithologically distinct from higher, more easterly ecoregions. Potential natural vegetation is a mosaic of oak–hickory forest and
bluestem prairie and is unlike the southern floodplain forest of Ecoregions 72a (
Wabash–Ohio Bottomlands) and 73a (
Holocene Meander Belts). Grasslands and forested wetlands were once widespread here and in the
Western Pennyroyal Karst Plain (71e). Most of the original vegetation has now been replaced by cropland. Extensive corn, soybean, wheat, hay, tobacco, livestock, and poultry farming occurs.
Agricultural runoff has degraded surface water quality. High turbidity and siltation are common in the streams and rivers of Ecoregion 74b. The eastern boundary of this region is broad, with a gradual transition to the
Southeastern Plains.
Baton Rouge Terrace (74d) The Baton Rouge Terrace ecoregion occurs on the Pleistocene Prairie Terraces and is lower in elevation and has flatter topography than Ecoregion 74c to the north. Similar to other parts of Ecoregion 74, loess is thicker to the west. The soils are mostly
Alfisols with brown or grayish-brown, silt loam surfaces that developed in the loess parent materials. High
sodium soils are common. The natural vegetation was influenced by the unusual soil conditions and by different forest types occurring in adjacent regions, with some upland
hardwoods to the northwest, hardwood
flatwoods and
spruce-pine–hardwood mixed forests across extensive broad flats, and many areas of bottomland hardwoods. Large areas of the mixed pine–hardwood forest have now been cleared for pasture, cropland, and urban uses. Urban uses cover about fifty percent of the region, comprising the
Baton Rouge metropolitan area. == References ==