Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Precipitation and Soil Productivity Explain Effects of Grazing on Grassland Songbirds
Author
Lipsey, M.K.
Naugle, D.E.
Publisher
Society for Range Management
Publication Year
2017
Body

Temperate grassland ecosystems are imperiled globally, and habitat loss in North America has resulted in steep declines of endemic songbirds. Commercial livestock grazing is the primary land use in rangelands that support remaining bird populations. Some conservationists suggest using livestock as "ecosystem engineers" to increase habitat heterogeneity in rangelands because birds require a spectrum of sparse to dense vegetation cover. However, grazing effects remain poorly understood because local studies have not incorporated broad-scale environmental constraints on herbaceous growth. We surveyed grassland birds across a region spanning 26 500 km2 in northeast Montana, United States to assess how distribution and abundance were affected by weather, soils, and grazing. We modeled bird abundance to characterize regional response to herbaceous cover, experimentally manipulated grazing to isolate its effect, and then scaled back up to evaluate how the regional environment constrains bird response to grazing. Regional models predict that a quarter of our study region was productive grassland where managed grazing could benefit specialist species; the remainder was nongrassland or low-productivity soils where it had low potential to affect habitat. Grassland species distributed themselves along a gradient of herbaceous cover with predictable shifts in community composition. We demonstrated experimentally that grazing influences bird communities within productive grasslands, with higher utilization promoting more Chestnut-collared Longspur (Calcarius ornatus) and fewer Baird's Sparrow (Ammodramus bairdii). Results inform a new conceptual framework for grazing that explicitly incorporates the role of broad-scale environmental constraints. © Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of The Society for Range Management. The Rangeland Ecology & Management archives are made available by the Society for Range Management and the University of Arizona Libraries. Contact lbry-journals@email.arizona.edu for further information.

Language
en
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.1016/j.rama.2016.10.010
Additional Information
Lipsey, M. K., & Naugle, D. E. (2017). Precipitation and Soil Productivity Explain Effects of Grazing on Grassland Songbirds. Rangeland Ecology & Management, 70(3), 331–340.
IISN
1550-7424
OAI Identifier
oai:repository.arizona.edu:10150/667433
Journal Volume
70
Journal Number
3
Journal Pages
331-340
Journal Name
Rangeland Ecology & Management
Keywords
grassland birds
grazing
northern Great Plains
precipitation
Soil Productivity