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Predicting the effects of grazing management on moorland bird abundance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 November 2017

S. M. Gardner*
Affiliation:
ADAS Preston, 15 Eastway Business Village, Oliver’s Place, Fulwood, Preston PR2 4WT, U.K.
G. M. Buchanan
Affiliation:
RSPB Scotland, Dunedin House, 25 Ravelston Terrace, Edinburgh EH4 3TP, Scotland
J. W. Pearce-Higgins
Affiliation:
RSPB Scotland, Dunedin House, 25 Ravelston Terrace, Edinburgh EH4 3TP, Scotland
M. C. Grant
Affiliation:
RSPB Scotland, Dunedin House, 25 Ravelston Terrace, Edinburgh EH4 3TP, Scotland
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Extract

Field studies of grazing management have frequently concluded that the magnitude and direction of vegetation response is dependent on initial vegetation condition. On upland heath, this dependence reflects the importance of small-scale ecological processes (e.g. plant competition), and local neighbourhood effects (e.g. spatial distribution of plant species), in driving the vegetation dynamics. These small-scale effects, together with variation in grazing patterns, increase the difficulty of deriving general rules about the effect of grazing on vegetation change from field studies. However, we need to determine the impacts of such grazing-related vegetation change upon biodiversity, (e.g. birds). For many bird species it is impractical to use experimental approaches due to low breeding densities, and the influence of other site and management effects (e.g. predator control). To predict the effect of management changes on them requires an accurate assessment of the large-scale effects of grazing management on the ecological landscape using data from small-scale field studies. This paper sets out an approach that integrates field studies with theoretical models to investigate the large-scale effects of grazing management on plant and bird communities on upland heath.

Type
Theatre Presentations
Copyright
Copyright © The British Society of Animal Science 2005

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References

Gardner, S.M. 2002. Managing upland vegetation for sheep and conservation. BGS Occasional Symposium 42: 115118 Google Scholar
Pearce-Higgins, J. and Grant, M. 2002. The effects of grazing-related variation in habitat on the distribution of moorland skylarks (Alauda arvensis ) and meadow pipits (Anthus pratensis). Aspects of Applied Biology 42: 155163 Google Scholar