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Spatial Variability in Cost and Success of Revegetation in a Wyoming Big Sagebrush Community
Authors:Chad S Boyd  Kirk W Davies
Institution:USDA-Agricultural Research Service, Eastern Oregon Agricultural Research Center (EOARC), 67826-A Hwy 205, Burns, OR, 97720, USA, chad.boyd@oregonstate.edu.
Abstract:The ecological integrity of the Wyoming big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata Nutt. ssp. wyomingensis Beetle and A. Young) alliance is being severely interrupted by post-fire invasion of non-native annual grasses. To curtail this invasion, successful post-fire revegetation of perennial grasses is required. Environmental factors impacting post-fire restoration success vary across space within the Wyoming big sagebrush alliance; however, most restorative management practices are applied uniformly. Our objectives were to define probability of revegetation success over space using relevant soil-related environmental factors, use this information to model cost of successful revegetation and compare the importance of vegetation competition and soil factors to revegetation success. We studied a burned Wyoming big sagebrush landscape in southeast Oregon that was reseeded with perennial grasses. We collected soil and vegetation data at plots spaced at 30?m intervals along a 1.5?km transect in the first two years post-burn. Plots were classified as successful (>5?seedlings/m(2)) or unsuccessful based on density of seeded species. Using logistic regression we found that abundance of competing vegetation correctly predicted revegetation success on 51?% of plots, and soil-related variables correctly predicted revegetation performance on 82.4?% of plots. Revegetation estimates varied from $167.06 to $43,033.94/ha across the 1.5?km transect based on probability of success, but were more homogenous at larger scales. Our experimental protocol provides managers with a technique to identify important environmental drivers of restoration success and this process will be of value for spatially allocating logistical and capital expenditures in a variable restoration environment.
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