4.5 Article

Assessing vegetation recovery from energy development using a dynamic reference approach

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8508

Keywords

Artemisia; quantile regression; resilience; sagebrush; soil properties; weather

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of the Interior-Bureau of Land Management
  2. U.S. Geological Survey

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This study demonstrated the use of a dynamic reference approach to studying sagebrush recovery. Results showed that sagebrush recovery on former well pads increased more when paired reference sites had greater sagebrush cover. Higher quantiles of sagebrush cover were projected to recover quickly, while lower quantiles were projected to have minimal recovery within 100 years. The findings highlight the importance of using dynamic reference sites and quantile regression for vegetation recovery studies.
Ecologically relevant references are useful for evaluating ecosystem recovery, but references that are temporally static may be less useful when environmental conditions and disturbances are spatially and temporally heterogeneous. This challenge is particularly acute for ecosystems dominated by sagebrush (Artemisia spp.), where communities may require decades to recover from disturbance. We demonstrated application of a dynamic reference approach to studying sagebrush recovery using three decades of sagebrush cover estimates from remote sensing (1985-2018). We modelled recovery on former oil and gas well pads (n = 1200) across southwestern Wyoming, USA, relative to paired references identified by the Disturbance Automated Reference Toolset. We also used quantile regression to account for unmodelled heterogeneity in recovery, and projected recovery from similar disturbance across the landscape. Responses to weather and site-level factors often differed among quantiles, and sagebrush recovery on former well pads increased more when paired reference sites had greater sagebrush cover. Little (<5%) of the landscape was projected to recover within 100 years for low to mid quantiles, and recovery often occurred at higher elevations with cool and moist annual conditions. Conversely, 48%-78% of the landscape recovered quickly (within 25 years) for high quantiles of sagebrush cover. Our study demonstrates advantages of using dynamic reference sites when studying vegetation recovery, as well as how additional inferences obtained from quantile regression can inform management.

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