Spatial heterogeneity of soil resources, particularly nitrogen availability, affects herbaceous-layer cover and diversity in temperate forest ecosystems. Current hypotheses predict that ungulate herbivores influence nitrogen availability at the stand scale, but how ungulates affect nitrogen availability at finer spatial scales that are relevant to the herb layer is less understood. We tested the hypothesis that ungulate exclusion reduces the spatial complexity of nitrogen availability at neighborhood scales (1-26 m) apart from mean stand scale effects. This outcome was expected due to a lack of ungulate nitrogenous waste deposition within exclosures and seasonally variable ungulate habitat use. To test this hypothesis we examined spatial pa...
Herbivores may influence the nitrogen (N) recycling rates and consequently increase or decrease the ...
Grasslands are subject to considerable alteration due to human activities globally, including widesp...
Ungulates have become abundant in many temperate forests, shifting tree species composition by brows...
Forest ungulates impact ecosystems in a number of ways. Most studies have focused on consumptive eff...
Concentrated foraging in forest canopy gaps by large ungulates may produce a pulsed spatial resource...
Our research explored the influence of deer and gap size on nitrogen cycling, soil compaction, and v...
Herbivores impact soil biogeochemical processes, often increasing nutrient cycling rates under high ...
Ungulate populations are increasing across Europe with important implications for forest plant commu...
Nitrogen (N) is an essential nutrient for plants and animals, and N may be limiting in many western ...
Forest management and ungulate herbivory are extant drivers of herbaceous-layer community compositio...
Although habitat selection and home range size of herbivores in forested landscapes are generally re...
We investigated the potential for cross-habitat interactions to modulate per capita ungulate browse ...
Large wild ungulates are a major biotic factor shaping plant communities. They influence species abu...
In the long‐term, herbivores can alter nutrient dynamics in terrestrial ecosystems by changing the f...
Grasslands are subject to considerable alteration due to human activities globally, including widesp...
Herbivores may influence the nitrogen (N) recycling rates and consequently increase or decrease the ...
Grasslands are subject to considerable alteration due to human activities globally, including widesp...
Ungulates have become abundant in many temperate forests, shifting tree species composition by brows...
Forest ungulates impact ecosystems in a number of ways. Most studies have focused on consumptive eff...
Concentrated foraging in forest canopy gaps by large ungulates may produce a pulsed spatial resource...
Our research explored the influence of deer and gap size on nitrogen cycling, soil compaction, and v...
Herbivores impact soil biogeochemical processes, often increasing nutrient cycling rates under high ...
Ungulate populations are increasing across Europe with important implications for forest plant commu...
Nitrogen (N) is an essential nutrient for plants and animals, and N may be limiting in many western ...
Forest management and ungulate herbivory are extant drivers of herbaceous-layer community compositio...
Although habitat selection and home range size of herbivores in forested landscapes are generally re...
We investigated the potential for cross-habitat interactions to modulate per capita ungulate browse ...
Large wild ungulates are a major biotic factor shaping plant communities. They influence species abu...
In the long‐term, herbivores can alter nutrient dynamics in terrestrial ecosystems by changing the f...
Grasslands are subject to considerable alteration due to human activities globally, including widesp...
Herbivores may influence the nitrogen (N) recycling rates and consequently increase or decrease the ...
Grasslands are subject to considerable alteration due to human activities globally, including widesp...
Ungulates have become abundant in many temperate forests, shifting tree species composition by brows...