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Tamarix, Willow and Beaver in Grand Canyon National Park: Inferring Top-Down Influences from Spatial Pattern Analysis DR. SUSAN MORTENSON, University of Nevada - Reno, Ecology, Evolution and Conservation Biology Program DR. PETER WEISBERG, Assistant Professor of Landscape Ecology, University of Nevada - Reno, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Science BARBARA RALSTON, Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center, United States Geological Survey
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| Abstract: Beavers ( Castor canadensis ) can influence the competitive dynamics of plant species through selective foraging, collection of materials for dam creation, and alteration of hydrologic conditions. In the Grand Canyon National Park, the native Salix gooddingii (Goodding's willow) and Salix exigua (coyote willow) are a staple food of beavers. Because Salix competes with the invasive Tamarix ramosissima , land managers are concerned that beavers may cause an increase in Tamarix through selective foraging of Salix . A spatial analysis was conducted to assess whether the presence of beavers correlates with the relative abundance of Salix and Tamarix . These methods were designed to detect a system-wide effect of selective beaver foraging in this large study area (367 linear km of riparian habitat). Beavers, Salix , and Tamarix co-occurred at the broadest scales because they occupied similar riparian habitat, particularly geomorphic reaches of low and moderate resistivity. Once the affinity of Salix for particular reach types was accounted for, the presence of Salix was independent of beaver distribution. However, there was a weak positive association between beaver presence and Salix cover. Salix was limited to geomorphic settings with greater sinuosity and distinct terraces, while Tamarix occurred in sinuous and straighter sections of river channel (cliffs, channel margins) where it dominated the woody species composition. After accounting for covariates representing river geomorphology, the proportion of riparian surfaces covered by Tamarix was significantly greater for sites where beavers were present. This indicates that either Tamarix and beavers co-occur in similar habitats, beavers prefer habitats that have high Tamarix cover, or beavers contribute to Tamarix dominance through selective use of its native woody competitors. The hypothesis that beaver herbivory contributes to Tamarix dominance should be considered further through more mechanistic studies of beaver foraging processes and long-term plant community response. Funding provided by: USDA NRI ‘‘Biology of Weedy and Invasive Plants'' program & The National Park Service through the Great Basin Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit Project duration: 2006 - 2008 Publication: Mortenson, S.G., P.J. Weisberg, and B.E. Ralston. 2008. Do beavers promote the invasion of non-native tamarisk in the Grand Canyon riparian zone? Wetlands 28: 666-675. |
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University of Nevada, Reno Maintained by: Nathan Bristow |
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