2012
DOI: 10.3398/064.072.0402
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Site-Occupancy Monitoring of an Ecosystem Indicator: Linking Characteristics of Riparian Vegetation to Beaver Occurrence

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Cited by 7 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Beaver occupancy probability in our study ( = 0.57 ± 0.07) was slightly lower than other studies (0.74 ± 0.06, Breck et al 2012). Our prediction that beaver occupancy would be higher in areas with relatively more saplings within the site was supported by the data.…”
Section: Beaverssupporting
confidence: 77%
“…Beaver occupancy probability in our study ( = 0.57 ± 0.07) was slightly lower than other studies (0.74 ± 0.06, Breck et al 2012). Our prediction that beaver occupancy would be higher in areas with relatively more saplings within the site was supported by the data.…”
Section: Beaverssupporting
confidence: 77%
“…We used the 1992 National Land Cover Database (NLCD; Vogelmann et al 2001) as our forest type input. Beavers are generally considered to be "choosy generalists," preferring deciduous and early successional forest communities (Jenkins 1979, Curtis and Jensen 2004, Breck et al 2012), so we defined preferred forage as Deciduous and Mixed forest classes to account for the full availability of deciduous trees. We took the total area of deciduous and mixed classes within the forage buffer, divided by the total area within the habitat buffer, to obtain a final index that approximately equates with the relative abundance of high-quality forage within each route.…”
Section: Variable Selectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As the studies were reviewed, it became clear that many link the water needs of non‐vegetative taxa and their health to vegetation, which serves as habitat (e.g. Breck et al ., ). These relationships need to be further explored, but perhaps, maintaining the hydrology that supports riparian vegetation can be used as the master variable for riparian ecosystems in the absence of more complete data.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%