Four communities or sites dominated by blackbrush (Coleogyne ramosissima Torr.) were studied in the Kaiparowits Basin of southern Utah and northern Arizona. One site has been heavily grazed yearlong for about 100 years; the second has been lightly to moderately grazed in winter for 3 years; the third has had 10 years of recovery from heavy grazing; and the fourth is a relic, ungrazed blackbrush ecosystem. Soils were 87 to 99% sand and gravel with mean pH's 8.2 to 8.5. The relic site had significantly more herbaceous vegetation cover (composed primarily of perennial grasses) and total cover than all other sites. The relic site also had significantly more shrub and cryptogamic cover than the heavily grazed and recovery sites. The recovering s...
Long-term information on the effects of managed grazing versus excluded grazing effects on vegetatio...
Herbivory by both grazing and browsing ungulates shapes the structure and functioning of terrestrial...
Sustainable management of riparian ecosystems depends on our understanding of these complex systems....
Eight general study sites were examined in the blackbrush (Coleogyne ramosissima) zone of southweste...
Millions of hectares of sagebrush (Artemisia L.) plant communities have been degraded by past improp...
Range managers often assume that release of vegetation from livestock grazing pressure will automati...
A combination of management and physical topographic constraints caused cattle to concentrate on the...
The effects of grazing management systems on plant communities in the Great Basin are largely unknow...
The purpose of this study was to provide basic ecological information on an important but little stu...
Grazing was eliminated from the Appleton-Whittell Research Ranch Sanctuary, located in south-central...
Changes in native plant community cover and composition are generally gradual and affected by multip...
Despite extensive coverage and long-term use, the extent to which shadscale [Atriplex confertifolia ...
Vegetation changes which occurred during 12 years of protection from grazing were documented in moun...
We surveyed the vegetation at 19 locations inside and outside 12 exclosures built at various times i...
Livestock grazing is the most extensive land use in Wyoming big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata ssp....
Long-term information on the effects of managed grazing versus excluded grazing effects on vegetatio...
Herbivory by both grazing and browsing ungulates shapes the structure and functioning of terrestrial...
Sustainable management of riparian ecosystems depends on our understanding of these complex systems....
Eight general study sites were examined in the blackbrush (Coleogyne ramosissima) zone of southweste...
Millions of hectares of sagebrush (Artemisia L.) plant communities have been degraded by past improp...
Range managers often assume that release of vegetation from livestock grazing pressure will automati...
A combination of management and physical topographic constraints caused cattle to concentrate on the...
The effects of grazing management systems on plant communities in the Great Basin are largely unknow...
The purpose of this study was to provide basic ecological information on an important but little stu...
Grazing was eliminated from the Appleton-Whittell Research Ranch Sanctuary, located in south-central...
Changes in native plant community cover and composition are generally gradual and affected by multip...
Despite extensive coverage and long-term use, the extent to which shadscale [Atriplex confertifolia ...
Vegetation changes which occurred during 12 years of protection from grazing were documented in moun...
We surveyed the vegetation at 19 locations inside and outside 12 exclosures built at various times i...
Livestock grazing is the most extensive land use in Wyoming big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata ssp....
Long-term information on the effects of managed grazing versus excluded grazing effects on vegetatio...
Herbivory by both grazing and browsing ungulates shapes the structure and functioning of terrestrial...
Sustainable management of riparian ecosystems depends on our understanding of these complex systems....