1998
DOI: 10.1080/02827589809382961
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The use of coniferous seedlings as alternative food to protect red oak (Quercus rubra) from vole girdling

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Food selection by voles appears to occur at both stand and plant levels (Hjälten et al 1993). Accordingly, studies exploring the use of alternative food as a way to protect tree seedlings from vole damage have found evidence of either associational resistance or associational susceptibility depending on the spatial scale used and the palatability of the alternative food as compared to the target tree species (Hjälten et al 1993, Bergeron et al 1998, Sullivan et al 2001, Pusenius et al 2003). The results of studies examining the effects of tree species diversity and composition on moose also are conflicting.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Food selection by voles appears to occur at both stand and plant levels (Hjälten et al 1993). Accordingly, studies exploring the use of alternative food as a way to protect tree seedlings from vole damage have found evidence of either associational resistance or associational susceptibility depending on the spatial scale used and the palatability of the alternative food as compared to the target tree species (Hjälten et al 1993, Bergeron et al 1998, Sullivan et al 2001, Pusenius et al 2003). The results of studies examining the effects of tree species diversity and composition on moose also are conflicting.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Browsing by white‐tail deer Odocoileus virginianum Zimmermann and girdling by meadow voles Microtus pennsylvanicus Ord are key factors in determining the success of Q. rubra in North America (Bergeron, Goulet, & Gonzalez‐Voyer, 1998; Levine, Winchcombe, Canham, Christenson, & Ronsheim, 2012). Other mammals such as elk, hares, cottontail rabbits, pocket gophers and moose also occasionally feed on Red Oak in North America (Huntly & Inouye, 1988; Telfer, 1972; Van Dersal, 1940).…”
Section: Herbivory and Diseasementioning
confidence: 99%