Potential cheatgrass abundance within lightly invaded areas of the Great Basin

Landscape Ecology
By: , and 

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Abstract

Context
Anticipating where an invasive species could become abundant can help guide prevention and control efforts aimed at reducing invasion impacts. Information on potential abundance can be combined with information on the current status of an invasion to guide management towards currently uninvaded locations where the threat of invasion is high.

Objectives
We aimed to support management by developing predictive maps of potential cover for cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum), a problematic invader that can transform plant communities. We integrated our predictions of potential abundance with mapped estimates of current cover to quantify invasion potential within lightly invaded areas.

Methods
We used quantile regression to model cheatgrass abundance as a function of climate, weather, and disturbance, treating outputs as low to high invasion scenarios. We developed a species-specific set of covariates and validated model performance using spatially and temporally independent data.

Results
Potential cheatgrass abundance was higher in areas that had burned, at low elevations, and when fall germination conditions were more favorable. Our results highlight the extensive areas across the Great Basin where cheatgrass abundance could increase to levels that can alter fire behavior and cause other ecological impacts.

Conclusions
We predict potential cheatgrass abundance to quantify relative invasion risk. Our model results provide high and low scenarios of cheatgrass abundance to guide resource allocation and planning efforts across shrubland ecosystems of the Great Basin that remain relatively uninvaded. Combining information on an invasive species’ current and potential abundance can yield spatial predictions to guide resource allocation and management action.

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Potential cheatgrass abundance within lightly invaded areas of the Great Basin
Series title Landscape Ecology
DOI 10.1007/s10980-022-01487-9
Volume 37
Year Published 2022
Language English
Publisher Springer
Contributing office(s) Fort Collins Science Center
Description 12 p.
First page 2607
Last page 2618
Country United States
State California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah
Other Geospatial Great Basin
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