Elk grazing and vegetation responses following a late season fire in Yellowstone National Park |
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Authors: | Tracy Benjamin F McNaughton Samuel J |
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Institution: | (1) Biological Research Labs, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13244, USA |
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Abstract: | We studied responses of aboveground production, grazing by elk and the availability of eight elements (Ca, Fe, K, Mg, N, Na, P, Zn) in a Yellowstone National Park sagebrush grassland following a fire in 1992. We compared four areas of differing fire history: (1) an area burned in 1992, (2) an area burned in 1992 and 1988, (3) an area burned in 1988 and (4) an area with no recent fire history. The year after burning, graminoids produced more aboveground biomass on burned areas compared with unburned areas. Forages growing on burned soils were highly concentrated with all nutrients, except Ca, when elk grazed the site. Despite nutrient-rich forage on burned areas, elk consumed little forage in these areas. We hypothesized that elk ate less than expected in burned areas because of a large bloom of lupine (Lupinus sericeus), which may be unpalatable to elk. |
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Keywords: | Aboveground production Burning Grazing Lupine Nutrients |
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