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Bird community responses to cattle stocking rates in a Pacific Northwest bunchgrass prairie
Authors:Tracey N. Johnson  Patricia L. KennedyTim DelCurto  Robert V. Taylor
Affiliation:a Department of Fisheries and Wildlife and Eastern Oregon Agricultural Research Center, Oregon State University, 372 South 10th Street, Union, OR 97883, USA
b Department of Animal Science and Eastern Oregon Agricultural Research Center, Oregon State University, 372 South 10th Street, Union, OR 97883 USA
c The Nature Conservancy, 906 South River Street, Enterprise, OR 97828, USA
Abstract:In 2006-2010, effects of four different cattle stocking rates (0, 14.4, 28.8, and 43.2 animal unit months) were compared, representing 0%, 20%, 32%, and 46% utilization of vegetation by domestic livestock, on vegetation structure (as indexed by visual obstruction), and songbird population and apparent nest density, community composition, and diversity in a Pacific Northwest bunchgrass prairie in northeastern Oregon, USA. Overall paddock-level visual obstruction decreased and structural heterogeneity increased with increasing stocking rates, and those effects carried over 1 year after grazing had ceased. Most species were able to locate nesting sites regardless of differences in visual obstruction, except western meadowlark and vesper sparrow, for which obstruction was lower in paddocks with higher stocking rates. Apparent nest density for grasshopper sparrows was negatively affected by higher stocking rates. Grazing effects on absolute songbird population density were restricted to negative effects of higher stocking rates on savannah sparrows, but this relationship was not observed until 1 year after grazing had ceased. Songbird community composition differed between control and heavily-grazed paddocks, driven by an increase in the proportion of horned larks and a decrease in the proportion of savannah sparrows in heavily-grazed paddocks from pre-treatment to post-treatment years. Bird diversity indices were unaffected by stocking rate. Negative effects of high stocking rates on densities of two species and the absence of any clear positive effect for the other three species suggest high stocking rates as applied in this experiment may not provide suitable habitat for all grassland songbirds. The absence of negative responses of density to low and moderate stocking rates suggests these grazing regimes generally provided suitable habitat for all species.
Keywords:Ground-nesting bird   Vegetation structure   Rangeland management   Habitat complexity   Nonmetric multidimensional scaling   Sustainable grazing
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