Biblio

Found 6 results
Author Title [ Type(Desc)] Year
Filters: Keyword is Herbivory and Author is Kirk W. Davies  [Clear All Filters]
Journal Article
K. W. Davies, Bates, J. D., Boyd, C. S., O'Connor, R., and Copeland, S. M., Dormant-Season Moderate Grazing Prefire Maintains Diversity and Reduces Exotic Annual Grass Response Postfire in Imperiled Artemisia Steppe, Rangeland Ecology & Management, vol. 79, pp. 91 - 99, 2021.
K. W. Davies, Bates, J. D., and Boyd, C. S., Effects of Intermediate-Term Grazing Rest on Sagebrush Communities with Depleted Understories: Evidence of a Threshold, Rangeland Ecology & Management, vol. 69, no. 3, pp. 173 - 178, 2016.
C. S. Boyd, Davies, K. W., and Collins, G. H., Impacts of Feral Horse Use on Herbaceous Riparian Vegetation Within a Sagebrush Steppe Ecosystem, Rangeland Ecology & Management, vol. 70, no. 4, pp. 411 - 417, 2017.
K. W. Davies, Vavra, M., Schultz, B., and Rimbey, N. R., Implications of Longer Term Rest From Grazing in the Sagebrush Steppe, Journal of Rangeland Applications, vol. 1, pp. 14–34, 2014.
K. W. Davies, Bates, J. D., Boyd, C. S., and Svejcar, T., Prefire grazing by cattle increases postfire resistance to exotic annual grass ( Bromus tectorum ) invasion and dominance for decades, Ecology and Evolution, no. 10, pp. 3356 - 3366, 2016.
S. M. Copeland, Hoover, D. L., Augustine, D. J., Bates, J. D., Boyd, C. S., Davies, K. W., Derner, J. D., Duniway, M. C., Porensky, L. M., and Vermeire, L. T., Variable Effects of Long‐Term Livestock Grazing Across the Western United States Suggest Diverse Approaches are Needed to Meet Global Change Challenges, Applied Vegetation Science, vol. 26, no. 1, 2023.