Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
J. S. Castrale (1982)
Effects of Two Sagebrush Control Methods on Nongame BirdsJ. Wildl. Manage, 46
J. S. Castrale (1982)
Effects of two sagebrush control methods on nongame birdsJ. Wildl. Manage, 46
S. T. Knick (1995)
Landscape Characteristics of Fragmented Shrubsteppe Habitats and Breeding Passerine BirdsConservation Biology, 9
J. A. MacMahon (1985)
Deserts
L. S. Fore (1996)
Assessing Invertebrate Responses to Human Activities: Evaluating Alternative ApproachesJournal of the North American Benthological Society, 15
M. L. Morrison (1986)
Bird Populations as Indicators of Environmental ChangeCurrent Ornithology, 5
C. E. Bock, V. A. Saab, T. D. Rich, D. S. Dobkin (1993)
Status and Management of Neotropical Migratory Birds
L. B. Best (1972)
First-Year Effects of Sagebrush Control on Two SparrowsJ. Wildl. Manage., 36
A. K. Moors (1993)
Towards an Avian Index of Biotic Integrity for Lakes
T. D. Reynolds, C. H. Trost (1981)
Grazing, crested wheatgrass, and bird populations in southeastern IdahoNorthwest Science, 55
L. S. Fore, J. R. Karr, R.W. Wisseman (1996)
Assessing invertebrate responses to human activities: evaluating alternative approachesJournal of the North American Benthological Society, 15
J. A. Wiens, J. T. Rotenberry (1985)
Response of breeding passerine birds to rangeland alteration in a North American shrubsteppe localityJ. Applied Ecology, 22
J. P. Blaisdell, R. B. Murray, E. D. McArthur (1982)
Managing Intermountain Rangelands – Sagebrush-grass Ranges
T. D. Reynolds (1980)
The Response of Native Vertebrate Populations to Crested Wheatgrass Planting and Grazing by SheepJ. Range Manage., 33
J. R. Karr, D. R. Dudley (1981)
Ecological perspective on water quality goalsEnvironmental Management, 5
S. T. Knick, J. T. Rotenberry (1995)
Landscape characteristics of fragmented shrubsteppe habitats and breeding passerine birdsConservation Biology, 9
T. D. Reynolds (1981)
Northwest Science, 55
J. P. Blaisdell, R. C. Holmgren (1984)
Managing Intermountain Rangelands – Salt-desert Shrub Ranges
C. E. Bock (1984)
Responses of Birds, Rodents, and Vegetation to Livestock Exclosure in a Semidesert Grassland SiteJ. Range Management, 37
D. E. Medin (1986)
Grazing and passerine breeding birds in a Great Basin low–shrub desertGreat Basin Nat., 46
J. Verner (1984)
The guild concept applied to management of bird populationsEnvironmental Management, 8
P. L. Angermeier (1994)
Biological Integrity versus Biological Diversity as Policy DirectivesBioscience, 44
P. R. Ehrlich, D. S. Dobkin, D. Wheye (1988)
The Birder's Handbook
J. R. Karr (1981)
Ecological perspective on water quality goalsEnvironmental Management, 5
C. E. Braun, M. F. Baker, R. L. Eng, J. S. Gashwiler, M. H. Schroeder (1976)
Conservation committee report on effects of alteration of sagebrush communities on the associated avifaunaWilson Bull., 88
P. L. Angermeier, J. R. Karr (1994)
Biological integrity versus biological diversity as policy directivesBioscience, 44
J. A. Wiens (1974)
Climatic Instability and the "Ecological Saturation" of Bird Communities in North American GrasslandsCondor, 76
J. R. Karr (1993)
Defining and assessing ecological integrity: Beyond water qualityEnvironmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 12
D. E. Brown, C. H. Lowe, C. P. Pase (1979)
A digitized classification system for the biotic communities of North America, with community (series) and association examples for the SouthwestJournal of the Arizona-Nevada Academy of Science, 14
V. A. Saab (1995)
Livestock Grazing Effects In Western North America
C. D. Bonham (1989)
Measurements for Terrestrial Vegetation
M. L. Morrison (1986)
Bird populations as indicators of environmental changeCurrent Ornithology, 5
J. R. Karr (1991)
Biological integrity: a long-neglected aspect of water resource managementEcological Applications, 1
T. D. Reynolds, C. H. Trost (1980)
The response of native vertebrate populations to crested wheatgrass planting and grazing by sheepJ. Range Manage., 33
J. A. Wiens (1974)
Climatic instability and the “ecological saturation” of bird communities in North American grasslandsCondor, 76
N. E. West (1982)
Ecosystems of the World
J. Verner (1984)
The guild concept applied to management of bird populationsEnvironmental Management, 8
J. A. Wiens (1985)
Response of Breeding Passerine Birds to Rangeland Alteration in a North American Shrubsteppe LocalityJ. Applied Ecology, 22
M. J. Croonquist, R. P. Brooks (1991)
Use of avian and mammalian guilds as indicators of cumulative impacts in riparian-wetland areasEnvironmental Management, 15
J. P. Blaisdell (1982)
Managing Intermountain rangelands - sagebrush-grass ranges
M. J. Croonquist (1991)
Use of avian and mammalian guilds as indicators of cumulative impacts in riparian-wetland areasEnvironmental Management, 15
R. C. Holmgren (1973)
Arid Shrublands–Proceedings of the Third Workshop of the U.S./Australia Rangelands Panel
M. Cody (1985)
Habitat Selection in Birds
C. E. Bock, J. J. Bock, W. R. Kenney, V. M. Hawthorne (1984)
Responses of birds, rodents, and vegetation to livestock exclosure in a semidesert grassland siteJ. Range Management, 37
L. B. Best (1972)
First-year effects of sagebrush control on two sparrowsJ. Wildl. Manage., 36
J. R. Karr (1993)
Defining and assessing ecological integrity: beyond water qualityEnvironmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 12
V. A. Saab, C. E. Bock, T. D. Rich, D. S. Dobkin (1995)
Ecology and Management of Neotropical Migratory Birds
P. R. Adamus, K. Brandt (1990)
Impacts on Quality of Inland Wetlands of the United States: a Survey of Indicators, Techniques, and Applications of Community-level Biomonitoring Data
J. R. Karr (1991)
Biological Integrity: A Long-Neglected Aspect of Water Resource ManagementEcological Applications, 1
D. E. Medin (1986)
Great Basin Nat., 46
C. E. Braun (1976)
Wilson Bull., 88
J. P. Blaisdell (1984)
Managing lntermountain rangelands - salt-desert shrub ranges
M. H. Schroeder, D. L. Sturges (1975)
The effect on the Brewer's sparrow of spraying big sagebrushJ. Range Manage., 28
M. H. Schroeder (1975)
The Effect on the Brewer's Sparrow of Spraying Big SagebrushJ. Range Manage., 28
(1976)
National Range Handbook
D. E. Brown (1979)
Journal of the Arizona-Nevada Academy of Science, 14
(1994)
Rangeland Health: New Methods to Classify, Inventory, and Monitor Rangelands
The study evaluates the potential for bird species assemblages to serve as indicators of biological integrity of rangelands in the Great Basin in much the same way that fish and invertebrate assemblages have been used as indicators in aquatic environments. Our approach was to identify metrics of the bird community using relatively simple sampling methods that reflect the degree of rangeland degradation and are consistent over a variety of vegetation types and geographic areas. We conducted the study in three range types (i.e., potential natural plant community types) in each of two widely separated areas of the Great Basin: south-eastern Idaho (sagebrush steppe range types) and west-central Utah (salt-desert shrub range types). Sites were selected in each range type to represent three levels of grazing impact, and in Idaho included sites modified for crested wheatgrass production. Birds were sampled by point counts on 9 100-m radius plots at 250-m spacing on each of 20 sites in each area during the breeding season. In sagebrush-steppe, 964 individuals in 8 species of passerine birds were used in analyses. Five metrics were significantly related to impact class, both when analyzed within range type and when analyzed with all range types combined. Species richness, relative abundance of shrub obligate species, and relative abundance of Brewer's sparrow were generally lower for the higher impact classes, whereas the reverse was true for dominance by a single species and for relative abundance of horned larks. In contrast, total number of individuals did not differ significantly as a function of impact class. In salt-desert shrub, a total of 843 birds in 4 species were included in analyses, 98% of which were horned larks. None of the metrics identified above was significantly related to impact class. Two metrics for breeding birds in sagebrush steppe (species richness and dominance) showed little overlap between values for the extremes of impact class, and thus they have potential as indicators of biological integrity. However, the sensitivity of these metrics appears to be greatest at the high impact end of the spectrum, which suggests they may have limited utility in distinguishing between sites having light and moderate impact.
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment – Springer Journals
Published: Oct 13, 2004
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.