Breeding bird response to cattle grazing of a cottonwood bottomland
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Published source details
Sedgwick J.A. & Knopf F.L. (1987) Breeding bird response to cattle grazing of a cottonwood bottomland. Journal of Wildlife Management, 51, 230-237.
Published source details Sedgwick J.A. & Knopf F.L. (1987) Breeding bird response to cattle grazing of a cottonwood bottomland. Journal of Wildlife Management, 51, 230-237.
Actions
This study is summarised as evidence for the following.
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Employ grazing in non-grassland habitats Action Link |
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Employ grazing in non-grassland habitats
A replicated controlled trial in a cottonwood Populus sargentii bottomland in northeast Colorado, USA (Sedgwick & Knopf 1987), found that moderate late-autumn cattle grazing had no impact on breeding densities of six selected migratory songbirds over three study years. Five 16 ha cottonwood floodplain plots were fenced and cattle-grazed in October-November 1982-1984, and five were unmanaged. Analysis focussed on six species dependent on the grass-herb-shrub layer for foraging, nesting, or both: house wren Troglodytes aedon, brown thrasher Toxostoma rufum, American robin Turdus migratorius, common yellowthroat Geothlypis trichas, yellow-breasted chat Icteria virens and rufous-sided towhee Pipilo erythropthalmus.
Output references
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