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Ungulate Browsing Maintains Shrub Diversity in the Absence of Episodic Disturbance in Seasonally-Arid Conifer Forest

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Title Ungulate Browsing Maintains Shrub Diversity in the Absence of Episodic Disturbance in Seasonally-Arid Conifer Forest
Names Pekin, Burak K. (creator)
Wisdom, Michael J. (creator)
Endress, Bryan A. (creator)
Naylor, Bridgett J. (creator)
Parks, Catherine G. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-01-23 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The article was published by the Public Library of Science and is in the public domain.
Abstract Ungulates exert a strong influence on the composition and diversity of vegetation communities. However, little is known
about how ungulate browsing pressure interacts with episodic disturbances such as fire and stand thinning. We assessed
shrub responses to variable browsing pressure by cattle and elk in fuels treated (mechanical removal of fuels followed by
prescribed burning) and non-fuels treated forest sites in northeastern Oregon, US. Seven treatment paddocks were
established at each site; three with cattle exclusion and low, moderate and high elk browsing pressure, three with elk
exclusion and low, moderate and high cattle browsing pressure, and one with both cattle and elk exclusion. The height,
cover and number of stems of each shrub species were recorded at multiple plots within each paddock at the time of
establishment and six years later. Changes in shrub species composition over the six year period were explored using
multivariate analyses. Generalized Linear Mixed Models were used to determine the effect of browsing pressure on the
change in shrub diversity and evenness. Vegetation composition in un-browsed paddocks changed more strongly and in
different trajectories than in browsed paddocks at sites that were not fuels treated. In fuels treated sites, changes in
composition were minimal for un-browsed paddocks. Shrub diversity and evenness decreased strongly in un-browsed
paddocks relative to paddocks with low, moderate and high browsing pressure at non-fuels treated sites, but not at fuels
treated sites. These results suggest that in the combined absence of fire, mechanical thinning and ungulate browsing, shrub
diversity is reduced due to increased dominance by certain shrub species which are otherwise suppressed by ungulates
and/or fuels removal. Accordingly, ungulate browsing, even at low intensities, can be used to suppress dominant shrub
species and maintain diversity in the absence of episodic disturbance events.
Genre Article
Access Condition http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
Identifier Pekin BK, Wisdom MJ, Endress BA, Naylor BJ, Parks CG (2014) Ungulate Browsing Maintains Shrub Diversity in the Absence of Episodic Disturbance in Seasonally-Arid Conifer Forest. PLoS ONE 9(1): e86288. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0086288

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