Cover components on long-term seasonal sheep grazing treatments in three-tip sagebrush steppe.

E.W. Bork, N.E. West, J.W. Walker

Abstract


The effects of fall and spring sheep use on cover components and recovery following a change in seasonality of grazing practices, were studied within long-term grazing treatments of three-tip sagebrush (Artemisia tripartita Rydb.) steppe on the U.S. Sheep Experiment Station near Dubois, Ida. Few significant differences existed among treatments within the litter, moss, lichen, and soil components, but several differences in vegetational cover categories occurred. More live shrub and annual grass cover were observed in the long-term (since 1924) and new spring (since 1950) treatments than in the long-term fall (since 1924), new fall (since 1950), old exclosure (since 1940), and new exclosure (since 1950) (P < 0.01). More perennial grass and forb cover, and less dead shrub cover existed in fall-grazed treatments (P < 0.01). The new fall- grazed treatment previously grazed in the spring failed to reach a more uniform mixture of perennial growth forms after 46 years such as was evident in the long-term fall, which suggests low resilience following spring grazing. The exclosure which was heavily spring and fall-grazed prior to 1950 had even less perennial forb cover than the new fall treatment, indicating that the cessation of sheep grazing did not promote herb recovery any better than continued fall use. The direct impact of sheep herbivory and its indirect effects on the competitive relationships among major plants appear to have affected the cover of sagebrush steppe components at this study site.

Keywords


artemisia tripartita;Balsamorhiza;timing;ground cover;controlled grazing;stocking rate;Idaho;semiarid zones;sheep;plant density;botanical composition;rangelands;canopy;grazing

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