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Thursday, 10 September 2015

Prescribed fire effects on resource selection by cattle in mesic sagebrush steppe. Part 1: Spring grazing

Volumes 100–101, January–February 2014, Pages 78–88

Highlights

Beef cows were GPS tracked 2 yrs prefire and 5 yrs postfire on sagebrush steppe.
A resource selection function accurately predicted prefire and postfire cattle use.
Slope and sagebrush cover were the primary drivers of prefire cattle use.
Prefire cattle were neutral towards areas later receiving light/moderate fire severity.
Cattle selected for lightly/moderately-burned areas for at least 5 years postfire.

Abstract

Prescribed fire is commonly applied world-wide as a tool for enhancing habitats and altering resource-selection patterns of grazing animals. A scientific basis for this practice has been established in some ecosystems but its efficacy has not been rigorously evaluated on mesic sagebrush steppe. Beginning in 2003, resource-selection patterns of beef cows were investigated using global positioning system (GPS) collars for 2 years before and for 5 years after a fall prescribed burn was applied to mesic sagebrush steppe in the Owyhee Mountains of southwestern Idaho, USA. Resource-selection functions (RSF) developed from these data indicated cattle selected for lightly to moderately burned areas for all 5 postfire years. Cattle had been neutral towards these areas prior to the fire when their distribution was primarily affected by slope, sagebrush dominance, and distance to upland water. Resource-selection responses to the fire lasted 2–3 years longer than would be expected for fire-induced, forage-quality improvement effects. Although this is a case study and caution should be taken in extrapolating these results, if applied under conditions similar to this study, livestock producers and natural resource managers can likely use fall prescribed fire in the mesic sagebrush steppe to affect cattle resource-use patterns for 5 years postfire.

Keywords

  • Burning;
  • GPS tracking;
  • Habitat use;
  • Livestock distribution;
  • Modeling;
  • Rangeland improvement

1. Introduction

Prescribed fire is commonly applied to rangelands throughout the world as a tool for enhancing habitats and managing resource-selection patterns of grazing animals (Butz, 2009, Pyne, 1995 and Wikeem and Strang, 1983). A scientific basis for this management practice has been established in montane grasslands, tall grass prairie, mixed prairie, shortgrass prairie, shrub steppe, and savanna (Augustine et al., 2010, Bates et al., 2009, Hobbs and Spowart, 1984, Klop et al., 2007, Peek et al., 1979 and Vermeire et al., 2004). The sagebrush-steppe ecosystem occupies about 44.4 million ha in western North America. Higher elevation, mesic communities, dominated by mountain big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata Nutt. ssp. vaseyanna Beetle) and/or antelope bitterbrush (Purshia tridentata [Pursh] DC), form a substantial proportion of the sagebrush steppe and serve as principal livestock grazing areas. Despite their prominence, use of prescribed fire for managing resource selection by livestock has never been rigorously evaluated on mesic sagebrush steppe rangelands.
Fire has always played an important ecological role, promoting heterogeneity on mesic sagebrush steppe rangelands. Prior to settlement, natural ignitions temporally converted areas of sagebrush-grassland to perennial grassland. Fire-killed sagebrush and bitterbrush eventually regrew, principally from seed, and returned the landscape back to sagebrush-grassland (Lesica et al., 2007). Fire also killed fire-sensitive, tree species like western juniper (Juniperus occidentalis Hook.) which tend to encroach into mesic sagebrush steppe ( Miller and Rose, 1999).
Modern introductions of highly-flammable, exotic invasive plants like cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum L.) and medusa head (Taeniatherum caput-medusae [L.] Nevski) have increased fire frequencies in some areas and raised concerns about the modern role of fire in the sagebrush steppe ( Whisenant, 1989, D’Antonio and Vitousek, 1992, Brooks et al., 2004 and Pierson et al., 2011). However, while fire in the lower-elevation, more arid portions of the sagebrush steppe (e.g., Wyoming big sagebrush [A. tridentata Nutt. ssp. wyomingensis Beetle]-dominated communities) may cause severe degradation by converting sagebrush-grasslands into annual grasslands dominated by cheatgrass, type conversions of this nature are not inevitable ( Davies et al., 2008) and are much less likely in the mesic sagebrush steppe where cheatgrass is less competitive with native perennial grasses ( Chambers et al., 2007). In fact, within mesic sagebrush steppe, the concern is often about a modern lack of fire rather too much fire. Fire suppression or exclusion can lead to overmature, dense, excessively woody stands of mountain big sagebrush and antelope bitterbrush. Lack of fire can also promote encroachment of western juniper eventually resulting in a type conversion from sagebrush-grasslands to dense woodlands ( Miller and Rose, 1999). Trees and shrubs can out-compete herbaceous plants for light, moisture, and soil nutrients ( Wrobleski and Kauffman, 2003). Consequently, progression towards dense, overmature shrub stands or juniper woodlands can dramatically reduce the vigor, productivity, and availability of forage plant species important to rangeland livestock and wildlife (e.g., mule deer [Odocoileus hemionus Rafinesque]) ( Miller et al., 2000). Prescribed fire is increasingly being applied by nature resource managers, to overmature stands of sagebrush or sagebrush stands suffering from tree encroachment, to carefully restart a fire cycle previously stalled by fire suppression. The intended purposes of these prescribed fires are often manifold but commonly fire is applied to improve livestock distribution.
Many factors affect livestock behavior and consequent resource-selection patterns (Bailey et al., 1996 and Senft et al., 1987). Vegetation composition, cover, and forage characteristics affect use patterns of grazing animals (Bailey, 1995, Ganskopp and Bohnert, 2009, Ganskopp et al., 1992, Gillen et al., 1984 and Howery et al., 1996). Water and mineral sources, topography, weather, and site microclimate also affect choice of foraging and resting areas, distance traveled between these focus areas, and time spent in them (Bailey, 1995, Bailey, 2005, Bailey et al., 2008, Cook, 1966, Howery et al., 1998, Loza et al., 1992, Mueggler, 1965 and Senft et al., 1985). To be effective, livestock management treatments, including prescribed fire, must account for or work in concert with the most dominant of these environmental factors.
The intent of this research project was to evaluate spatial and temporal effects of prescribed fire on resource selection, activity budgets, and movement path characteristics of beef cattle in mesic sagebrush steppe rangelands. Two studies were carried out where, the first evaluated these cattle behavioral responses during spring (early May) just prior to peak forage production and, the second was conducted mid-summer (July) as forage plants began to senesce. The present paper presents findings from the first study. Two additional papers in this series present the findings from the mid-summer study and the results from cattle activity budget and movement path evaluations of both studies. Specific objectives of the spring grazing study were to: 1) model the resource-selection responses of cattle to prescribed fire and environmental factors; and 2) evaluate the efficacy of upland prescribed fire application for managing cattle distribution.