See more from this Session: Soil Change: Management, Practices, and Policy: II
State
and transition models have been utilized to catalog ecological information and
assess management risks and benefits on rangeland sites. These models are one approach to describing
the various states a particular site can achieve, the forces that transition
sites between states, and the role range management plays in the process. In
the oak rangeland ecological sites of the Sierra Nevada Foothills, development
of state and transition models has been based upon vegetation properties, with
little integration of soil change and ecosystem services derived from
plant-soil interactions (e.g., carbon sequestration, soil water storage, biodiversity).
We will discuss the integration of dynamic
soil and vegetation properties into ecosystem service-based state and
transition models for oak rangeland ecological sites. We will present data
supporting the: 1) Identification of cost-effective and easily measurable
proxies for dynamic soil and vegetation properties supporting key ecosystem
services; 2) Identification of ecologically unique sites and states based upon
plant-soil dependent ecosystem services; 3) Quantification of associations
between dynamic properties, ecosystem services, and oak and grazing regimes to assess
potential for management; and 4) Determination of ecological resilience of sites and states to
grazing management.