Small mammal responses to biosolids on grazed rangelands in British Columbia |
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Authors: | Jennifer Meineke Francis I. Doyle Louisa Oukil Karen E. Hodges |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Biology, University of British Columbia Okanagan, 1177 Research Road, Kelowna, BC, V1V 1V7 Canada;2. Wildlife Dynamics Consulting, 5575 Kleanza Drive, Terrace, BC, V8G 0A7 Canada |
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Abstract: | Grasslands are globally declining due to habitat conversion, overgrazing, climate change, and changes in fire and drought regimes. Degraded grasslands are less able to support wildlife species, which contributes to the imperilment of many species. Biosolids are used by some ranchers as an organic amendment to support more plant growth and in turn more livestock. We worked on a large cattle ranch in central British Columbia, Canada, to determine how biosolids amendment affected small mammal populations, as mice and voles are major prey for many predators and contribute to seed dispersal and underground dynamics. We found that biosolids-amended pastures had more grass cover and supported fewer deermice (Peromyscus maniculatus) than did unamended pastures. Voles were scarce, likely due to a cyclic low. Although we sampled sites that had had biosolids applied 1 or 3 years prior to our work started, deermouse populations were similarly low across these sites. The reduction in deermice on sites with biosolids relative to unamended sites could be a signal of habitat restoration, because deermice prefer disturbed habitats rather than ones with high plant cover. Grass cover was more than twice as high on sites amended with biosolids, making these sites less suitable for deermice. |
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Keywords: | British Columbia deermice grasslands meadow vole montane vole restoration |
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