Publication | Open Access
The cascading impacts of livestock grazing in upland ecosystems: a 10‐year experiment
108
Citations
48
References
2015
Year
EngineeringRangeland ProductivityLand UseLivestock ProductionAgricultural EconomicsLivestock Grazing PressureLand DegradationLivestock GrazingHabitat ManagementSocial SciencesWildlife EcologyBiodiversityEcosystem InteractionFood Web InteractionHabitat LossFarm ManagementNatural Resource ManagementLivestock DensitiesUpland Ecosystems
Livestock grazing is a major driver of land‐use change, causing significant biodiversity loss globally. Although the short‐term effects of livestock grazing on individual species are well studied, a mechanistic understanding of the long‐term, cascading impacts is lacking. We manipulated livestock densities using a unique, replicated upland experiment over a 10‐year period and found significant effects of grazing treatment on plant and arthropod biomass; the number of Anthus pratensis breeding bird territories; the amplitude of Microtus agrestis population cycles and the activity of a top predator, Vulpes vulpes . Lower plant biomass as a result of higher stocking densities led to cascades across trophic levels, with fewer arthropods and small mammals, the latter affecting predator activity. Breeding bird territories were a function of arthropod abundance and vegetation structure heterogeneity. Our results provide a novel food‐web analysis in a grazing experiment to provide a mechanistic understanding of how food‐webs in upland ecosystems respond to long‐term livestock grazing pressure, with consequences for management.
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