Arid
DOI10.3996/052015-JFWM-046
Enhancing and Restoring Habitat for the Desert Tortoise
Abella, Scott R.1,2; Berry, Kristin H.3
通讯作者Abella, Scott R.
来源期刊JOURNAL OF FISH AND WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT
ISSN1944-687X
出版年2016
卷号7期号:1页码:255-279
英文摘要

Habitat has changed unfavorably during the past 150 y for the desert tortoise Gopherus agassizii, a federally threatened species with declining populations in the Mojave Desert and western Sonoran Desert. To support recovery efforts, we synthesized published information on relationships of desert tortoises with three habitat features (cover sites, forage, and soil) and candidate management practices for improving these features for tortoises. In addition to their role in soil health and facilitating recruitment of annual forage plants, shrubs are used by desert tortoises for cover and as sites for burrows. Outplanting greenhouse-grown seedlings, protected from herbivory, has successfully restored (>50% survival) a variety of shrubs on disturbed desert soils. Additionally, salvaging and reapplying topsoil using effective techniques is among the more ecologically beneficial ways to initiate plant recovery after severe disturbance. Through differences in biochemical composition and digestibility, some plant species provide better-quality forage than others. Desert tortoises selectively forage on particular annual and herbaceous perennial species (e.g., legumes), and forage selection shifts during the year as different plants grow or mature. Nonnative grasses provide low-quality forage and contribute fuel to spreading wildfires, which damage or kill shrubs that tortoises use for cover. Maintaining a diverse "menu" of native annual forbs and decreasing nonnative grasses are priorities for restoring most desert tortoise habitats. Reducing herbivory by nonnative animals, carefully timing herbicide applications, and strategically augmenting annual forage plants via seeding show promise for improving tortoise forage quality. Roads, another disturbance, negatively affect habitat in numerous ways (e.g., compacting soil, altering hydrology). Techniques such as recontouring road berms to reestablish drainage patterns, vertical mulching ("planting" dead plant material), and creating barriers to prevent trespasses can assist natural recovery on decommissioned backcountry roads. Most habitat enhancement efforts to date have focused on only one factor at a time (e.g., providing fencing) and have not included proactive restoration activities (e.g., planting native species on disturbed soils). A research and management priority in recovering desert tortoise habitats is implementing an integrated set of restorative habitat enhancements (e.g., reducing nonnative plants, improving forage quality, augmenting native perennial plants, and ameliorating altered hydrology) and monitoring short-and long-term indicators of habitat condition and the responses of desert tortoises to habitat restoration.


英文关键词annual plants burrow disturbance forage grazing restoration revegetation
类型Article
语种英语
国家USA
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000378082600026
WOS关键词BLACKBRUSH COLEOGYNE-RAMOSISSIMA ; BIDIRECTIONAL RECOVERY PATTERNS ; AQUEDUCT PIPELINE CORRIDOR ; NATIONAL TRAINING-CENTER ; MINING REGIONS EXAMPLES ; EASTERN MOJAVE DESERT ; GOPHERUS-AGASSIZII ; ANNUAL PLANTS ; NUTRITIONAL QUALITY ; JUVENILE DESERT
WOS类目Biodiversity Conservation ; Ecology
WOS研究方向Biodiversity & Conservation ; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
来源机构United States Geological Survey
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/194411
作者单位1.Univ Nevada, Sch Life Sci, Las Vegas, NV 89154 USA;
2.Nat Resource Conservat LLC, 1400 Colorado St, Boulder City, NV 89005 USA;
3.US Geol Survey, Western Ecol Res Ctr, 21803 Cactus Ave,Suite F, Riverside, CA 92518 USA
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Abella, Scott R.,Berry, Kristin H.. Enhancing and Restoring Habitat for the Desert Tortoise[J]. United States Geological Survey,2016,7(1):255-279.
APA Abella, Scott R.,&Berry, Kristin H..(2016).Enhancing and Restoring Habitat for the Desert Tortoise.JOURNAL OF FISH AND WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT,7(1),255-279.
MLA Abella, Scott R.,et al."Enhancing and Restoring Habitat for the Desert Tortoise".JOURNAL OF FISH AND WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT 7.1(2016):255-279.
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