Document


Title

Grassland birds and habitat structure in sandhills prairie managed using cattle or bison plus fire
Document Type: Journal Article
Author(s): Randall L. Griebel; Stephen L. Winter; Allen A. Steuter
Publication Year: 1998

Cataloging Information

Keyword(s):
  • bird populations
  • bison
  • cattle
  • fire
  • grassland
  • grassland birds
  • grazing
  • Great Plains
  • Nebraska
  • patch burn grazing
  • prairie
  • sandhills
Region(s):
Record Maintained By:
Record Last Modified: November 12, 2015
FRAMES Record Number: 17958

Description

Grassland birds are known to respond to specific changes in habitat structure, such as plant height and density. However, the response of grassland bird Communities to management induced changes in the regional habitat mosaic are less well understood. Grazing by ungulates and fire regimes play an important role in defining the habitat mosaic in the Great Plains. We provide information on bird abundance, distribution, and habitat structure from similar sandhill prairie landscapes managed traditionally with grazing by cattle (Bos taurus) and by a dynamic bison (Bos bison)-plus-fire regime. Although the two management regimes are dissimilar, only a few differences were recorded in bird abundance, distribution, and habitat structure at the landscape scale. Our result may reflect either the inherent variability of sandhills prairie compared to the scale at which grassland birds perceive habitat, or the short time frame over which the dynamic bison-plus-fire regime has been in place. The specific habitat patches produced by fire and by intensive bison grazing do appear to have different bird communities and habitat structure at the local scale.

Online Link(s):
Citation:
Griebel, Randall L.; Winter, Stephen L.; Steuter, Allen A. 1998. Grassland birds and habitat structure in sandhills prairie managed using cattle or bison plus fire. Great Plains Research 8:255-268.