Authors
Anthony C Yacucci, Walter P Carson, Jenna C Martineau, Curtis D Burns, Brian P Riley, Alejandro A Royo, Thomas P Diggins, Ian J Renne
Publication date
2023/12/18
Journal
New Forests
Pages
1-18
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Description
Throughout eastern North America, chronic white-tailed deer overbrowsing and widespread exotic plant invasions degrade native plant diversity and abundance. However, because deer densities are high across entire regions, it is challenging to find large areas where deer have been at low density for long periods. We predicted native plant diversity and abundance would be significantly higher during gap-phase regeneration where deer have been maintained at low densities (~ 7 deer/km²) compared to where deer have been chronically overabundant. Simultaneously, we predicted that exotic plant diversity and abundance would be lower in gaps where deer have been maintained at low versus high densities. We also evaluated whether deer density interacts with gap age, gap size, and gaps in dry versus more mesic forest patches. We studied 41 gaps throughout an 88 km2 fenced military post where deer …