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1 August 2014 Case Study: Long-Term Livestock Grazing Influence on Vegetation Class in Coyote Flat, California, USA
Rob Pearce, Ken Lair, Gary Frasier
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Abstract

On the Ground

  • Parker Three-Step data that exist on many US Forest Service allotments may be the only remaining, truly long-term vegetation and soil data available. Although Parker Three-Step procedures have been abandoned on many Forest Service districts, the historical insight they provide may be worth revisiting for management purposes.

  • The Parker photos that accompany the transect data may be of more value than the data.

  • Long-term vegetation records in Coyote Flat reveal the range to remain generally in fair condition since at least 1931, despite large reductions in livestock numbers, drastically shortened season of use, and 7 years of rest out of the last 13 grazing seasons.

  • The correlation and interaction between reduced grazing pressure and ecological condition on high-elevation mountain meadow ecosystems, particularly as revealed by Parker Three-Step data, is not always intuitive or linear.

Rob Pearce, Ken Lair, and Gary Frasier "Case Study: Long-Term Livestock Grazing Influence on Vegetation Class in Coyote Flat, California, USA," Rangelands 36(4), 2-12, (1 August 2014). https://doi.org/10.2111/RANGELANDS-D-14-00003.1
Published: 1 August 2014
KEYWORDS
Coyote grazing allotments
long-term vegetation data
Parker Three-Step
photo monitoring
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