Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Control of a desert-grassland transition by a keystone rodent guild
Author
Brown, J. H., E. J. Heske
Publication Year
1969
Body

Twelve years after three species of kangaroo rats (Dipodomys spp.) were removed from plots of Chihuahuan Desert shrub habitat, density of tall perennial and annual grasses had increased approximately threefold and rodent species, typical of arid grasslands, had colonized. These were just the most recent and dramatic effects in a series of changes in plants and animals caused by experimental exclusion of Dipodomys. In this ecosystem, kangaroo rats are a keystone guild: through seed predation and soil disturbance they have major effects on biological diversity and biogeochemical processes.

Language
en
Keywords
annual grasses
desert-grassland transition
Dipodomys spp.
kangaroo rats
keystone guild
perennial grasses
rodent populations
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