

| The
Effect of Fire on Bird and Small Mammal Communities in the Grasslands
of Wind Cave National Park
Forde, Jon D. 1983. The Effect of Fire on Bird and Small Mammal Communities in the Grasslands of Wind Cave National Park. M.S. Thesis. Michigan Technological University. 132+ p. Abstract An evaluation of the impact of prescribed burning treatments on vertebrate populations in Wind Cave National Park, South Dakota was conducted from 1980 to 1983. This study assessed the effect of fire on the grassland vegetation and on the breeding populations of birds and small mammals within the Park. The vegetative analysis
showed immediate reductions in perennial species and the amount of dead
material present after burning with a resulting increase in both two years
later. Bare ground-coverage increased immediately after the fire, indicating
a loss of protective cover for birds and small mammals. However, after
two years following the burns, bare ground estimates were below the pre-burn
levels. Two small mammal sampling techniques were used in the Park, with the prairie deer mouse (Peromyscus maniculatus bairdii) and thirteen-lined ground squirrel (Spermophilus tridecemlineatus) accounting for the majority of observations during the census work. Prescribed burning resulted in immediate increases in deer mice densities while ground squirrel densities generally decreased. The increased deer mice density lasted only one season dropping below pre-burn figures two years after the fire. |
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