Rangeland Ecology & Management

Get reliable science

Modulation of diversity by grazing and mowing in native tallgrass prairie
Author
Collins, S. L., A. K. Knapp, J. M. Briggs, J. M. Blair, E. M. Steinauer
Publication Year
1969
Body

Two long-term field experiments were performed in native tallgrass prairie grassland to assess the effects of fire, nitrogen addition, and grazing or mowing on plant species diversity. In the absence of grazing by bison (Bison bison), or through simulated herbivory in the form of clipping, burning increased the dominance of warm season grasses and reduced plant species diversity. After 9 years of treatment, plots burned annually or burned and fertilized with nitrogen, no longer included any cool season grasses or woody species. With the addition of mowing, burned and fertilized plots retained the same richness as the control and burned plots retained a lower number of cool season grasses. As with the grazing simulation, when grazed by bison, richness of both warm and cool season species increased in burned watersheds.

Language
en
Keywords
bison
species diversity
mowing
burning
Bison bison
fertilizer
habitat fragmentation
tallgrass prairie
  • Citations and enhanced abstracts for journals articles and documents focused on rangeland ecology and management. RSIS is a collaboration between Montana State University, University of Idaho, and University of Wyoming.