Rotational grazing of beef cattle to support Bobolink breeding success

Autor: Andrew J. Campomizzi, Zoé M. Lebrun-Southcott, Laura D. Van Vliet, Gerald A. Morris
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2019
Předmět:
Zdroj: Avian Conservation and Ecology, Vol 14, Iss 2, p 13 (2019)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 1712-6568
Popis: Conservation actions for the federally and provincially threatened Bobolink (Dolichonyx oryzivorus) in Ontario, Canada are ongoing in agricultural landscapes, including pastures. However, conditions conducive to Bobolink fledging young from breeding territories in rotationally grazed beef cattle (Bos taurus) pastures are not well understood. We tested two management strategies designed to provide habitat where Bobolink could fledge young in rotationally grazed pastures. We conducted (1) a refuge paddock experiment using a crossover design, comparing fledging success when paddocks were ungrazed in one year to when they were grazed in another year; and (2) a light spring grazing experiment. Additionally, we explored associations between fledging of young from territories with cattle stocking rate and date that cattle first entered paddocks. We used spot mapping and nest monitoring to determine if young fledged in 83 Bobolink territories in 2016 and 72 territories in 2017 on six farms in the Ottawa Valley, Ontario. In the refuge paddock experiment, 54% (N = 28) of Bobolink territories fledged young in eight ungrazed paddocks compared to 16% (N = 25) when these paddocks were grazed in another breeding season. In the light spring grazing experiment, 67% (N = 12) of territories fledged young from four paddocks that were grazed with a low stocking rate between 21 May and 03 June 2017 and not again until after 02 July. Additionally, predictions from a logistic regression model indicated that the probability of young fledging from a territory (N = 118) decreased from 0.53 to 0.04 when mid-season stocking rates increased from 0 to 174 cattle-days/ha. Our results illustrate that paddocks on rotationally grazed beef cattle farms that are ungrazed until the Bobolink breeding season is finished or grazed lightly for a brief duration soon after territories are established can provide areas that enable Bobolink to fledge young.
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