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Predatory Plants and Patchy Cows: Modeling Cattle Interactions with Toxic Larkspur Amid Variable Heterogeneity
Author
Jablonski, K.E.
Boone, R.B.
Meiman, P.J.
Publisher
Elsevier Inc.
Publication Year
2020-01
Body

The most common explanations for the evolution and persistence of herd behavior in large herbivores relate to decreased risk of predation. However, poisonous plants such as larkspur (Delphinium spp.) can present a threat comparable to predation. In the western United States, larkspur diminishes the economic and ecological sustainability of cattle production by killing valuable animals and restricting management options. Recommendations for mitigating losses have long focused on seasonal avoidance of pastures with larkspur, despite little evidence that this is practical or effective. Our ongoing research points to the cattle herd itself as the potential solution to this seemingly intractable challenge and suggests that larkspur and forage patchiness may drive deaths. In this paper, we present an agent-based model that incorporates neutral landscape models to assess the interaction between plant patchiness and herd behavior within the context of poisonous plants as predator and cattle as prey. The simulation results indicate that larkspur patchiness is a potential driver of toxicosis and that highly cohesive herds may greatly reduce the risk of death in even the most dangerous circumstances. By placing the results in context with existing theories about the utility of herds, we demonstrate that grouping in large herbivores can be an adaptive response to patchily distributed poisonous plants. Lastly, our results hold significant management-relevant insight, both for cattle producers managing grazing in larkspur habitat and in general as a call to reconsider the manifold benefits of herd behavior among domestic herbivores. © 2019 The Society for Range Management

Language
en
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.1016/j.rama.2019.08.016
Additional Information
Kevin E. Jablonski, Randall B. Boone, and Paul J. Meiman "Predatory Plants and Patchy Cows: Modeling Cattle Interactions with Toxic Larkspur Amid Variable Heterogeneity," Rangeland Ecology and Management 73(1), 73-83, (2 January 2020). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rama.2019.08.016
ISSN
1550-7424
OAI Identifier
oai:repository.arizona.edu:10150/679433
Journal Volume
73
Journal Number
1
Journal Pages
73-83
Collection
Rangeland Ecology & Management (REM)
Journal Name
Rangeland Ecology and Management
Keywords
agent-based modeling
grazing
herd behavior
poisonous plants
cattle
grazing management
heterogeneity
mortality risk
patchiness
persistence
poisoning
sustainability
toxicity
United States
Animalia
Bos
Delphinium