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Impact of ungulate exclusion on understorey succession in relation to forest management in the Intermountain Western United States

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Title Impact of ungulate exclusion on understorey succession in relation to forest management in the Intermountain Western United States
Names Pekin, Burak K. (creator)
Endress, Bryan A. (creator)
Wisdom, Michael J. (creator)
Naylor, Bridgett J. (creator)
Parks, Catherine G. (creator)
Date Issued 2015-04 (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 article is copyrighted by the International Association for Vegetation Science and published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. It can be found at: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291654-109X.
Abstract QUESTIONS: Do successional trajectories in plant diversity, heterogeneity and
dominance respond differently to ungulate exclusion in unmanaged forests vs
managed forests that are thinned and burned? Is vegetation in recently thinned
and burned stands more sensitive to changes in the grazing regime?
LOCATION: Northeast OR, USA.
METHODS: We evaluated changes in plant community composition, diversity,
heterogeneity and dominance under herbivory by multiple ungulates (cattle,
elk, deer) vs ungulate exclusion at sites where trees were recently thinned and a
prescribed burn was applied (managed), and in sites that were not thinned or
burned in over 40 yr (unmanaged). Plant species diversity was calculated with
the Simpsons index and richness as the total number of plant species. We estimated
changes in plant community heterogeneity using a measure of taxonomic
dissimilarity. Plant dominance was measured as the relative evenness among
different plant functional groups (annual and perennial forbs and graminoids,
and shrubs, subshrubs and trees).
RESULTS: As expected, managed sites displayed more early succession species,
such as annual forbs and annual graminoids,while unmanaged sites were dominated
by late-succession species such as shrubs, subshrubs and trees. Species
richness, particularly of annuals, was strongly reduced when ungulates were
excluded from managed sites, and to a lesser extent from unmanaged sites for
some perennial plant species. Species diversity decreased to a slightly greater
extent with ungulate exclusion at managed sites. Species dominance was not
influenced by ungulate exclusion. The effect of ungulate exclusion on plant heterogeneity
also depended on forest management. Heterogeneity increased at
managed sites and decreased in unmanaged sites with ungulate exclusion. Overall,
the change in vegetation composition over time increased with the exclusion
of ungulates, particularly at managed sites.
CONCLUSIONS: The strength and direction of specific vegetation and diversity
responses to ungulate exclusion vary with forest management, and the influence
of ungulate exclusion on plant succession is more pronounced in recently
thinned and burned sites. Management of wild and domestic ungulates thus
needs to account for forest management activities that alter vegetation seral
stage and increase the sensitivity of vegetation to the ungulate grazing regime.
Genre Article
Topic Cattle
Identifier Pekin, B. K., Endress, B. A., Wisdom, M. J., Naylor, B. J., & Parks, C. G. (2015). Impact of ungulate exclusion on understorey succession in relation to forest management in the Intermountain Western United States. Applied Vegetation Science, 18(2), 252-260. doi:10.1111/avsc.12145

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