Record Details

Restoration of Mountain Big Sagebrush Steppe Following Prescribed Burning to Control Western Juniper

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Title Restoration of Mountain Big Sagebrush Steppe Following Prescribed Burning to Control Western Juniper
Names Davies, K. W. (creator)
Bates, Jonathan D. (creator)
Madsen, M. D. (creator)
Nafus, A. M. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-05 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Springer and can be found at: http://link.springer.com/journal/267.
Abstract Western juniper (Juniperus occidentalis ssp.
occidentalis Hook) encroachment into mountain big sagebrush
(Artemisia tridentata spp. vaseyana (Rydb.) Beetle)
steppe has reduced livestock forage production, increased
erosion risk, and degraded sagebrush-associated wildlife
habitat. Western juniper has been successfully controlled
with partial cutting followed by prescribed burning the next
fall, but the herbaceous understory and sagebrush may be
slow to recover. We evaluated the effectiveness of seeding
perennial herbaceous vegetation and sagebrush at five sites
where juniper was controlled by partially cutting and prescribed
burning. Treatments tested at each site included an
unseeded control, herbaceous seed mix (aerially seeded),
and the herbaceous seed mix plus sagebrush seed. In the
third year post-treatment, perennial grass cover and density
were twice as high in plots receiving the herbaceous seed
mix compared to the control plots. Sagebrush cover and
density in the sagebrush seeded plots were between 74- and
290-fold and 62- and 155-fold greater than the other
treatments. By the third year after treatment, sagebrush
cover was as high as 12% in the sagebrush seeded plots
and between 0% and 0.4% where it was not seeded.
These results indicate that aerial seeding perennial herbaceous
vegetation can accelerate the recovery of perennial
grasses which likely stabilize the site. Our results also
suggest that seeding mountain big sagebrush after prescribed
burning encroaching juniper can rapidly recover sagebrush cover and density. In areas where sagebrush
habitat is limited, seeding sagebrush after juniper control
may increase sagebrush habitat and decrease the risks to
sagebrush-associated species.
Genre Article
Topic Aerial seeding
Identifier Davies, K. W., Bates, J. D., Madsen, M. D., & Nafus, A. M. (2014). Restoration of Mountain Big Sagebrush Steppe Following Prescribed Burning to Control Western Juniper. Environmental Management, 53(5), 1015-1022. doi:10.1007/s00267-014-0255-5

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