Resource Selection of Free-ranging Horses Influenced by Fire in Northern Canada

Free-ranging or feral horses (Equus ferus caballus) were important to the livelihood of First Nations and indigenous communities in Canada. The early inhabitants of the boreal region of British Columbia (BC) capitalized on naturally occurring wildfires and anthropogenic burning to provide forage for...

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Main Authors: Sonja E. R. Leverkus, Samuel D. Fuhlendorf, Marten Geertsema, Brady W. Allred, Mark Gregory, Alexandre R. Bevington, David M. Engle, J. Derek Scasta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Utah State University 2018-04-01
Series:Human-Wildlife Interactions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/hwi/vol12/iss1/10
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spelling doaj-e497853a231f4ac4b2c9cc3a43ee68142020-11-25T03:42:17ZengUtah State UniversityHuman-Wildlife Interactions2155-38742155-38742018-04-0112110.26077/j5px-af63Resource Selection of Free-ranging Horses Influenced by Fire in Northern CanadaSonja E. R. Leverkus0Samuel D. Fuhlendorf1Marten Geertsema2Brady W. Allred3Mark Gregory4Alexandre R. Bevington5David M. Engle6J. Derek Scasta7Oklahoma State University/Shifting Mosaics ConsultingOklahoma State UniversityBC Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations, and Rural DevelopmentUniversity of MontanaOklahoma State UniversityBC Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations, and Rural DevelopmentOklahoma State UniversityUniversity of WyomingFree-ranging or feral horses (Equus ferus caballus) were important to the livelihood of First Nations and indigenous communities in Canada. The early inhabitants of the boreal region of British Columbia (BC) capitalized on naturally occurring wildfires and anthropogenic burning to provide forage for free-ranging horses and manage habitat for wildlife. This form of pyric herbivory, or grazing driven by fi re via the attraction to the palatable vegetation in recently burned areas, is an evolutionary disturbance process that occurs globally. However, its application to manage forage availability for free-ranging horses has not been studied in northern Canada. Across Canada, there are varying levels of governance for feral and free-ranging horses depending on the provincial jurisdiction and associated legislation. The BC Range Act (Act) allows range tenure holders to free-range horses that they own for commercial operations on Crown land. Big-game guide outfitters as range tenure holders are provided grazing licences or grazing permits under the Act with an approved range use plan. Guide outfitters and other range tenure holders have incorporated fi re ecology as part of their rangeland management in mountainous portions of the boreal forest of northeastern BC to promote mosaics of vegetation height and species composition across the landscape to meet nutritional requirements of their free-ranging horses. Using resource selection function models, we evaluated the influence of pyric herbivory on boreal vegetation and use by horse herds occupying 4 distinct landscapes. We found that horses preferentially selected recently burned areas and areas that burned more frequently when they were available. We also found that horses avoided steep slopes and forest cover types. Fire and the ecological processes associated with it, including pyric herbivory, are important considerations when managing boreal rangelands in northeastern BC. Because historical fi re regimes of the boreal region of Canada differ from the arid regions of the United States inhabited by feral horses, the role of pyric herbivory in altering horse distributions in the United States is limited. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/hwi/vol12/iss1/10boreal forestscanadaequus ferus caballusfireguide outfittershorsespyric herbivoryrangelands
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language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sonja E. R. Leverkus
Samuel D. Fuhlendorf
Marten Geertsema
Brady W. Allred
Mark Gregory
Alexandre R. Bevington
David M. Engle
J. Derek Scasta
spellingShingle Sonja E. R. Leverkus
Samuel D. Fuhlendorf
Marten Geertsema
Brady W. Allred
Mark Gregory
Alexandre R. Bevington
David M. Engle
J. Derek Scasta
Resource Selection of Free-ranging Horses Influenced by Fire in Northern Canada
Human-Wildlife Interactions
boreal forests
canada
equus ferus caballus
fire
guide outfitters
horses
pyric herbivory
rangelands
author_facet Sonja E. R. Leverkus
Samuel D. Fuhlendorf
Marten Geertsema
Brady W. Allred
Mark Gregory
Alexandre R. Bevington
David M. Engle
J. Derek Scasta
author_sort Sonja E. R. Leverkus
title Resource Selection of Free-ranging Horses Influenced by Fire in Northern Canada
title_short Resource Selection of Free-ranging Horses Influenced by Fire in Northern Canada
title_full Resource Selection of Free-ranging Horses Influenced by Fire in Northern Canada
title_fullStr Resource Selection of Free-ranging Horses Influenced by Fire in Northern Canada
title_full_unstemmed Resource Selection of Free-ranging Horses Influenced by Fire in Northern Canada
title_sort resource selection of free-ranging horses influenced by fire in northern canada
publisher Utah State University
series Human-Wildlife Interactions
issn 2155-3874
2155-3874
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Free-ranging or feral horses (Equus ferus caballus) were important to the livelihood of First Nations and indigenous communities in Canada. The early inhabitants of the boreal region of British Columbia (BC) capitalized on naturally occurring wildfires and anthropogenic burning to provide forage for free-ranging horses and manage habitat for wildlife. This form of pyric herbivory, or grazing driven by fi re via the attraction to the palatable vegetation in recently burned areas, is an evolutionary disturbance process that occurs globally. However, its application to manage forage availability for free-ranging horses has not been studied in northern Canada. Across Canada, there are varying levels of governance for feral and free-ranging horses depending on the provincial jurisdiction and associated legislation. The BC Range Act (Act) allows range tenure holders to free-range horses that they own for commercial operations on Crown land. Big-game guide outfitters as range tenure holders are provided grazing licences or grazing permits under the Act with an approved range use plan. Guide outfitters and other range tenure holders have incorporated fi re ecology as part of their rangeland management in mountainous portions of the boreal forest of northeastern BC to promote mosaics of vegetation height and species composition across the landscape to meet nutritional requirements of their free-ranging horses. Using resource selection function models, we evaluated the influence of pyric herbivory on boreal vegetation and use by horse herds occupying 4 distinct landscapes. We found that horses preferentially selected recently burned areas and areas that burned more frequently when they were available. We also found that horses avoided steep slopes and forest cover types. Fire and the ecological processes associated with it, including pyric herbivory, are important considerations when managing boreal rangelands in northeastern BC. Because historical fi re regimes of the boreal region of Canada differ from the arid regions of the United States inhabited by feral horses, the role of pyric herbivory in altering horse distributions in the United States is limited.
topic boreal forests
canada
equus ferus caballus
fire
guide outfitters
horses
pyric herbivory
rangelands
url https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/hwi/vol12/iss1/10
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