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Fuel Reduction, Seeding, and Vegetation in a Juniper Woodland

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Title Fuel Reduction, Seeding, and Vegetation in a Juniper Woodland
Names Kerns, B. K. (creator)
Day, M. A. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-11 (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 the Society for Range Management and can be found at: http://www.bioone.org/loi/rama.
Abstract Western juniper has increased in density and distribution in the interior Pacific Northwest since the late 1800s. Management
goals for many juniper woodlands are now focused on reducing tree densities and promoting biodiversity, prompting the use of
fuel reduction treatments. Fuel reduction often involves mechanical cutting and disturbances such as slash pile burning and skid
trail formation. While these activities may reduce tree densities, the extent to which they will restore native biodiversity and
community composition, particularly in woodlands invaded by exotic annual grasses, is unclear. We evaluated the effects of
juniper cutting in two experiments of disturbance type (slash piles and skid trails) followed by three native seeding treatments
(cultivar, locally sourced, and no seed) on vegetation in central Oregon. Prior to cutting, native perennial grass cover and
richness were positively associated and exotic grass cover was negatively associated with juniper basal area. After cutting and 2
yr after seeding, species composition was altered for both disturbance types. Some seeded areas had higher total species richness,
higher native species richness, higher cover of seeded species, and higher overall cover compared to areas that were not seeded.
But seeding effectiveness in mitigating exotic species spread varied based on exotic species functional group, pretreatment
propagule pressure, and experiment disturbance type. Neither seed mix lowered exotic grass cover. There was limited evidence
that the cultivar mix outperformed the locally sourced native seed mix. In the short term, fuel reduction activities may have
facilitated further conversion of this woodland to an exotic grassland, but longer-term evaluation is needed. In juniper
woodlands that have been invaded by exotic species, fuel reduction activities may facilitate further invasion, and exotic species
control may be needed to limit invasion and promote native vegetation.
Genre Article
Topic big sagebrush
Identifier Kerns, B. K., & Day, M. A. (2014). Fuel Reduction, Seeding, and Vegetation in a Juniper Woodland. Rangeland Ecology & Management, 67(6), 667-679. doi:10.2111/REM-D-13-00149.1

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