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Model-Based Assessment of Aspen Responses to Elk Herbivory in Rocky Mountain National Park,USA
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Peter J?WeisbergEmail author  Michael B?Coughenour
Institution:(1) Mountain Forest Ecology Group, Department of Forest Sciences, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, ETH-Zentrum HG F21.5, CH-8092, Zurich, Switzerland;(2) Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Collins, 80523-1499, USA;(3) Author to whom correspondence should be addressed at current address: Department of Environmental and Resource Sciences, University of Nevada, Reno, 1000 Valley Road, MS 186, Reno, NV 89512, USA
Abstract:In Rocky Mountain National Park (RMNP), aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.) has been observed to be declining on elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) winter range for many decades. To support elk management decisions, the SAVANNA ecosystem model was adapted to explore interactions between elk herbivory and aspen dynamics. The simulated probability of successful vegetative regeneration for senescent aspen stands declines sharply when elk densities reach levels of 3–5 elk/km2, depending on model assumptions for the seasonal duration of elk foraging activities. For aspen stands with a substantial component of younger trees, the simulated regeneration probability declines more continuously with increasing elk density, dropping below 50% from densities at 8–14 elk/km2.At the landscape scale, simulated aspen regeneration probability under a scenario of extensive seasonal use was little affected by elk population level, when this level was above 300–600 elk (25%–50% current population) over the ca. 107 km2 winter range. This was because elk distribution was highly aggregated, so that a high density of elk occupied certain areas, even at low population levels overall. At approximately current elk population levels (1000–1200 elk), only 35%–45% of senescent aspen stands are simulated as having at least a 90% probability of regeneration, nearly all of them located on the periphery of the winter range. Successful management for aspen persistence on core winter range will likely require some combination of elk population reduction, management of elk distribution, and fencing to protect aspen suckers from elk browsing.
Keywords:Herbivory  National park management  Simulation models  Ungulate population management                  Populus tremuloides                                Cervus elaphus                Plant–  animal interactions
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