2019
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.2764
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Evaluating mechanisms of plant‐mediated effects on herbivore persistence and occupancy across an ecoregion

Abstract: Citation: Wilkening, J. L., E. J. Cole, and E. A. Beever. 2019. Evaluating mechanisms of plant-mediated effects on herbivore persistence and occupancy across an ecoregion. Ecosphere 10(6):Abstract. Contemporary climate change is rapidly creating one of the greatest challenges for management and conservation during the 21st century. Mountain ecosystems, which have a high degree of spatial heterogeneity and contain numerous habitat specialists, have been identified as particularly vulnerable. We used data from m… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 117 publications
(202 reference statements)
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“…Both variables are expected to indirectly influence forage conditions by mediating the availability of aboveground biomass and vegetation quality (Stephenson, 1998). Forage quality and composition have been documented as important for pika persistence and abundance elsewhere, including across the Southern and Central Rocky Mountains (Erb et al, 2014; Yandow et al, 2015), hydrographic Great Basin (Wilkening et al, 2019), as well as in the Pacific Northwest (Varner & Dearing, 2014). Despite the predictive abilities of these two variables, our field measurements of vegetation cover and type performed surprisingly poorly, possibly due to high, near‐patch forage availability in this ecoregion.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Both variables are expected to indirectly influence forage conditions by mediating the availability of aboveground biomass and vegetation quality (Stephenson, 1998). Forage quality and composition have been documented as important for pika persistence and abundance elsewhere, including across the Southern and Central Rocky Mountains (Erb et al, 2014; Yandow et al, 2015), hydrographic Great Basin (Wilkening et al, 2019), as well as in the Pacific Northwest (Varner & Dearing, 2014). Despite the predictive abilities of these two variables, our field measurements of vegetation cover and type performed surprisingly poorly, possibly due to high, near‐patch forage availability in this ecoregion.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While these changes appear to be the most pronounced at lower elevations and/or in more-isolated mountain ranges (Beever et al, 2016), evidence of demographic decline is also evident in parts of the species' core range (Billman et al, 2021;Stewart et al, 2017). Although pika declines have been associated with microhabitat features and changing vegetation communities, particularly reduced forb cover (Wilkening et al, 2011(Wilkening et al, , 2019, no studies have examined the effects of climate change on the nutritional quality of these plants, which could provide a key mechanistic link between changes in vegetation and changes in pika distribution, density, behavior, or physiology.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%