predicting intensity of white tailed deer herbivory in the central appalachian mountains /

Published at 2017-11-14 12:40:41

Home / Categories / Journal of forestry research / predicting intensity of white tailed deer herbivory in the central appalachian mountains
In eastern North America,white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) can beget profound influences on forest biodiversity and forest successional processes. Moderate to tall deer populations in the central Appalachians beget resulted in lower forest biodiversity. Legacy effects in some areas persist even following deer population reductions or declines. This has prompted managers to consider deer population management goals in light of policies designed to support conservation of biodiversity and forest regeneration while continuing to support ample recreational hunting opportunities. However, despite known relationships between herbivory intensity and biodiversity impact, and minute information exists on the predictability of herbivory intensity across the varied and spatially diverse habitat conditions of the central Appalachians. We examined the predictability of browsing rates across central Appalachian landscapes at four environmental scales: vegetative community characteristics,physical environment, habitat configuration, and local human and deer population demographics. In anĀ information-theoreticĀ approach,we found that a model fitting the number of stems browsed relative to local vegetation characteristics received most (62%) of the overall support of all tested models assessing herbivory impact. Our data suggest that deer herbivory responded most predictably to differences in vegetation quantity and type. No other spatial factors or demographic factors consistently affected browsing intensity. Because herbivory, vegetation communities, and productivity vary spatially,we suggest that effective broad-scale herbivory impact assessment should include spatially-balanced vegetation monitoring that accounts for regional differences in deer forage preference. Effective monitoring is necessary to avoid biodiversity impacts and deleterious changes in vegetation community composition that are difficult to reverse and/or may not be detected using traditional deer-density based management goals.

Source: usgs.gov

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