2018
DOI: 10.1111/rec.12848
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Postwildfire seeding to restore native vegetation and limit exotic annuals: an evaluation in juniper‐dominated sagebrush steppe

Abstract: Reestablishment of perennial vegetation is often needed after wildfires to limit exotic species and restore ecosystem services. However, there is a growing body of evidence that questions if seeding after wildfires increases perennial vegetation and reduces exotic plants. The concern that seeding may not meet restoration goals is even more prevalent when native perennial vegetation is seeded after fire. We evaluated vegetation cover and density responses to broadcast seeding native perennial grasses and mounta… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…First, our study does not define a timeline for reversal of a soil erosion feedback or the shift to "resource-conserving" conditions in these systems. Re-establishment of sagebrush steppe vegetation and associated surface soil conditions on degraded woodlands is highly variable, is driven by conditions at the time of treatment, the type of treatment, and posttreatment weather, and may require seeding Bates et al, 2014;Bates et al, 2017;Bates & Davies, 2016;Chambers et al, 2014;Davies et al, 2019;Miller et al, 2005;Miller et al, 2013;Miller et al, 2014;. However, our study does demonstrate tree removal on late-succession woodlands can effectively re-establish a "resource-conserving" vegetation structure and reverse the soil erosion feedback.…”
Section: Is the Soil Erosion Feedback On Late-succession Woodlands mentioning
confidence: 63%
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“…First, our study does not define a timeline for reversal of a soil erosion feedback or the shift to "resource-conserving" conditions in these systems. Re-establishment of sagebrush steppe vegetation and associated surface soil conditions on degraded woodlands is highly variable, is driven by conditions at the time of treatment, the type of treatment, and posttreatment weather, and may require seeding Bates et al, 2014;Bates et al, 2017;Bates & Davies, 2016;Chambers et al, 2014;Davies et al, 2019;Miller et al, 2005;Miller et al, 2013;Miller et al, 2014;. However, our study does demonstrate tree removal on late-succession woodlands can effectively re-establish a "resource-conserving" vegetation structure and reverse the soil erosion feedback.…”
Section: Is the Soil Erosion Feedback On Late-succession Woodlands mentioning
confidence: 63%
“…Re-establishment of sagebrush steppe vegetation and associated surface soil conditions on degraded woodlands is highly variable, is driven by conditions at the time of treatment, the type of treatment, and posttreatment weather, and may require seeding Bates et al, 2014;Bates et al, 2017;Bates & Davies, 2016;Chambers et al, 2014;Davies et al, 2019;Miller et al, 2005;Miller et al, 2013;Miller et al, 2014;. Re-establishment of sagebrush steppe vegetation and associated surface soil conditions on degraded woodlands is highly variable, is driven by conditions at the time of treatment, the type of treatment, and posttreatment weather, and may require seeding Bates et al, 2014;Bates et al, 2017;Bates & Davies, 2016;Chambers et al, 2014;Davies et al, 2019;Miller et al, 2005;Miller et al, 2013;Miller et al, 2014;.…”
Section: Patch-scale Run-off and Erosion From Combined Processesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Based on the treatment‐dependent rate of post‐treatment juniper development, a conservative estimate of the difference between cut and burned areas suggests that sagebrush will dominate/codominate the overstory 44% longer on burned areas (Figure ). Mountain big sagebrush cover, in general, can be rapidly recovered after fire in western juniper‐encroached shrub‐steppe with seeding sagebrush (Davies & Bates, ; Davies, Bates, & Boyd, ; Davies, Bates, Madsen, & Nafus, ). With successful seeding, sagebrush dominance can be extended to the majority of the time interval that juniper is controlled in burned areas.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A concern with woody plant treatments, including juniper removal in sagebrush ecosystems, is their potential to cause undesirable shifts in the plant community, in particular increased exotic plants (Archer et al, ; Bates, Sharp, & Davies, ; Bates, Svejcar, Miller, & Davies, ; Davies et al, ; Roundy, Miller, et al, ). Exotic annual grass increases, however, are generally assumed to be more problematic with burning, likely because of the positive feedback cycle between exotic annual grasses and fire (Chambers et al, ; D'Antonio & Vitousek, ; Rossiter, Setterfield, Douglas, & Hutley, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%