The abundance and composition of ungulate herbivore communities are changing globally, which can impact the resilience and function of Earth’s ecosystems. Impacts from herbivory are compounded in areas where multiple ungulates overlap, which is common in forest ecosystems. The objective of this study was to examine the differential and combined effects of ungulate communities (deer, elk, and cattle) on aspen forest recruitment after fires that occurred in 2012. Eight sets of differential ungulate exclosures, monitored by camera traps, were established across three National Forests in Utah. We identified the differential effect of each of three ungulate species using fencing that allowed for deer-only, native ungulate only (deer and elk), al...
Ecological disturbance strongly influences the regeneration success of aspen forests. In particular ...
Sudden aspen decline (SAD) is when aspen experience branch dieback, crown loss, and rapid mortality ...
Human activities and climate change are increasing the size and severity of wildfires globally, crea...
Aspen is a foundation species that provides vital habitat for hundreds of plant and animal species. ...
Herbivory by wild and domestic ungulates influences tree recruitment and alters plant community comp...
The role of livestock grazing and big-game browsing in the decline of aspen (Populus tremuloides Mic...
Herbivory by wild and domestic ungulates can influence tree recruitment and understory forest commun...
Quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.) forests are experiencing numerous impediments across Nort...
Ungulate communities are changing at a global scale, which is increasing the need for landscape scal...
Aims Recognizing ungulate browsing thresholds between viable and declining aspen (Populus tremuloide...
Herbivory by domestic and wild ungulates can dramatically affect vegetation structure, composition a...
Aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.) is a major component of Intermountain forest ecology and relies o...
In 2010, the Utah Department of Agriculture Grazing Improvement Program and Grand Canyon Trust conve...
Ungulate herbivory can create strong top-down effects on forest recruitment, especially after fire. ...
Ungulates impact woody species’ growth and abundance but little is understood about the comparative ...
Ecological disturbance strongly influences the regeneration success of aspen forests. In particular ...
Sudden aspen decline (SAD) is when aspen experience branch dieback, crown loss, and rapid mortality ...
Human activities and climate change are increasing the size and severity of wildfires globally, crea...
Aspen is a foundation species that provides vital habitat for hundreds of plant and animal species. ...
Herbivory by wild and domestic ungulates influences tree recruitment and alters plant community comp...
The role of livestock grazing and big-game browsing in the decline of aspen (Populus tremuloides Mic...
Herbivory by wild and domestic ungulates can influence tree recruitment and understory forest commun...
Quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.) forests are experiencing numerous impediments across Nort...
Ungulate communities are changing at a global scale, which is increasing the need for landscape scal...
Aims Recognizing ungulate browsing thresholds between viable and declining aspen (Populus tremuloide...
Herbivory by domestic and wild ungulates can dramatically affect vegetation structure, composition a...
Aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.) is a major component of Intermountain forest ecology and relies o...
In 2010, the Utah Department of Agriculture Grazing Improvement Program and Grand Canyon Trust conve...
Ungulate herbivory can create strong top-down effects on forest recruitment, especially after fire. ...
Ungulates impact woody species’ growth and abundance but little is understood about the comparative ...
Ecological disturbance strongly influences the regeneration success of aspen forests. In particular ...
Sudden aspen decline (SAD) is when aspen experience branch dieback, crown loss, and rapid mortality ...
Human activities and climate change are increasing the size and severity of wildfires globally, crea...