Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4380750 Acta Oecologica 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We used livestock diet to predict changes in seed bank available to seed consumers.•Heavy grazing reduced the cover and number of spikes of perennial grasses.•Heavy grazing did not affect systematically the cover of forbs, shrubs and trees.•Grass seeds selected and preferred by granivorous birds and ants declined with grazing.•Grass seed depletion may affect the behavior and abundance of granivorous animals.

We assess whether the knowledge of livestock diet helps to link grazing effects with changes in plant cover and soil seed bank size, aiming at inferring the consequences of grazing on seed-eating animals. Specifically, we test whether continuous and heavy grazing reduce the cover, number of reproductive structures and seed reserves of the same grass species whose seeds are selected and preferred by granivorous animals in the central Monte desert, Argentina. Grass cover and the number of grass spikes usually diminished under grazing conditions in the two localities studied (Telteca and Ñacuñán), and soil seed bank was consistently reduced in all three years evaluated owing to a decline of perennial grass and forb seeds. In particular, the abundance of those seeds selected and preferred by birds and ants (in all cases grass species) declined 70–92% in Ñacuñán, and 52–72% in Telteca. Reduction of perennial grass cover and spike number in grazed sites reinforced the causal link between livestock grazing and the decline of grass soil seed reserves throughout failed plant reproduction. Grass seed bank depletion suggests that grazing may trigger a “cascade” of mechanisms that affect the abundance and persistence of valuable fodder species as well as the availability of seed resources for granivorous animals.

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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