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Scale of heterogeneity of forage production and winter foraging by elk and bison

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Abstract

The relationship between fine-scale spatial patterns of forage abundance and the feeding patterns of large ungulates is not well known. We compared these patterns for areas grazed in winter by elk and bison in a sagebrush-grassland landscape in northern Yellowstone National Park. At a fine scale, the spatial distribution of mapped feeding stations in 30 m × 30 m sites was found to be random where there were no large patches devoid of vegetation. In areas similar to the mapped sites, the underlying spatial distribution pattern of biomass was also determined to be random. At a broad scale, forage biomass differed among communities across the northern range but forage quality did not. These results suggest that ungulates are feeding randomly within forage patches (fine scale) but may select feeding sites based upon forage abundance at broader, landscape scales. Contrary to what has been suggested in other systems, ungulates were not ‘overmatching’ at finer scales.

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Wallace, L.L., Turner, M.G., Romme, W.H. et al. Scale of heterogeneity of forage production and winter foraging by elk and bison. Landscape Ecol 10, 75–83 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00153825

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