z-logo
Premium
Grazing maintains native plant diversity and promotes community stability in an annual grassland
Author(s) -
Beck Jared J.,
Hernández Daniel L.,
Pasari Jae R.,
Zavaleta Erika S.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
ecological applications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.864
H-Index - 213
eISSN - 1939-5582
pISSN - 1051-0761
DOI - 10.1890/14-1093.1
Subject(s) - grazing , forb , species richness , plant community , grassland , herbivore , ecology , conservation grazing , native plant , introduced species , biodiversity , abundance (ecology) , biology , grazing pressure , species diversity , agronomy
Maintaining native biodiversity in grasslands requires management and mitigation of anthropogenic changes that have altered resource availability, grazing regimes, and community composition. In California (USA), high levels of atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition have facilitated the invasion of exotic grasses, posing a threat to the diverse plant and insect communities endemic to serpentine grasslands. Cattle grazing has been employed to mitigate the consequences of exotic grass invasion, but the ecological effects of grazing in this system are not fully understood. To characterize the effects of realistic N deposition on serpentine plant communities and to evaluate the efficacy of grazing as a management tool, we performed a factorial experiment adding N and excluding large herbivores in California's largest serpentine grassland. Although we observed significant interannual variation in community composition related to climate in our six‐year study, exotic cover was consistently and negatively correlated with native plant richness. Sustained low‐level N addition did not influence plant community composition, but grazing reduced grass abundance while maintaining greater native forb cover, native plant diversity, and species richness in comparison to plots excluding large herbivores. Furthermore, grazing increased the temporal stability of plant communities by decreasing year‐to‐year variation in native forb cover, native plant diversity, and native species richness. Taken together, our findings demonstrate that moderate‐intensity cattle grazing can be used to restrict the invasive potential of exotic grasses and maintain native plant communities in serpentine grasslands. We hypothesize that the reduced temporal variability in serpentine plant communities managed by grazing may directly benefit populations of the threatened Edith's Bay checkerspot butterfly ( Euphydryas editha bayensis ).

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here