Literature DB >> 33556190

Grazing affects vegetation diversity and heterogeneity in California vernal pools.

Julia Michaels1, Evan Batzer1, Susan Harrison2, Valerie T Eviner1.   

Abstract

Disturbance often increases local-scale (α) diversity by suppressing dominant competitors. However, widespread disturbances may also reduce biotic heterogeneity (β diversity) by making the identities and abundances of species more similar among patches. Landscape-scale (γ) diversity may also decline if disturbance-sensitive species are lost. California's vernal pool plant communities are species rich, in part because of two scales of β diversity: (1) within pools, as species composition changes with depth (referred to here as vertical β diversity), and (2) between pools, in response to dispersal limitation and variation in pool attributes (referred to here as horizontal β diversity). We asked how grazing by livestock, a common management practice, affects vernal pool plant diversity at multiple hierarchical spatial scales. In terms of abundance-weighted diversity, grazing increased α both within local pool habitat zones and at the whole-pool scale, as well as γ at the pasture scale without influencing horizontal or vertical β diversity. In terms of species richness, increases in α diversity within habitat zones and within whole pools led to small decreases in horizontal β diversity as species occupancy increased. This had a dampened effect on species richness at the γ (pasture) scale without any loss of disturbance-sensitive species. We conclude that grazing increases species richness and evenness (α) by reducing competitive dominance, without large disruptions to the critical spatial heterogeneity (β) that generates high landscape-level diversity (γ).
© 2021 by the Ecological Society of America.

Keywords:  beta diversity; disturbance; grazing; spatial scale; wetlands

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33556190     DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3295

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  1 in total

1.  An Improved Method for Monitoring Multiscale Plant Species Diversity of Alpine Grassland Using UAV: A Case Study in the Source Region of the Yellow River, China.

Authors:  Yi Sun; Yaxin Yuan; Yifei Luo; Wenxiang Ji; Qingyao Bian; Zequn Zhu; Jingru Wang; Yu Qin; Xiong Zhao He; Meng Li; Shuhua Yi
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2022-06-09       Impact factor: 6.627

  1 in total

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