Mg. Turner et al., SIMULATING WINTER INTERACTIONS AMONG UNGULATES, VEGETATION, AND FIRE IN NORTHERN YELLOWSTONE PARK, Ecological applications, 4(3), 1994, pp. 472-486
The interaction of large-scale fire, vegetation, and ungulates is an i
mportant management issue in Yellowstone National Park. A spatially ex
plicit individual-based simulation model was developed to explore the
effects of fire scale and pattern on the winter foraging dynamics and
survival of free-ranging elk (Cervus elaphus) and bison (Bison bison)
in northern Yellowstone National Park. The Northern Yellowstone Park (
NOYELP) model simulates the search, movement, and foraging activities
of individuals or small groups of elk 'and bison. The 77 020-ha landsc
ape is represented as a gridded irregular polygon with a spatial resol
ution of 1 ha. Forage intake is a function of an animal's initial body
mass, the absolute amount of forage available on a site, and the dept
h and density of snow. When the energy expenditures of an animal excee
d the energy gained during a day, the animal's endogenous reserves are
reduced to offset the deficits. Simulations are conducted with a 1-d
time step for a duration of 180 d, almost-equal-to 1 November through
the end of April. Simulated elk survival for three winters (1987-1988;
1988-1989; 1990-199 1) agreed with observed data.A factorial simulati
on experiment was conducted to explore the effects on ungulate surviva
l of fire size, fire pattern, and winter severity during an initial po
stfire winter (when no forage is available in burned areas) and a late
r postfire winter (when forage is enhanced in burned areas). Initial u
ngulate population sizes were held constant at 18 000 elk and 600 biso
n. Winter severity played a dominant role in ungulate survival. When w
inter conditions were extremely mild, even fires that affected 60% of
the landscape had no effect on ungulate-survival during the initial po
stfire winter. The effects of fire on ungulate survival become importa
nt when winter conditions were average to severe, and effects were app
arent in both the initial and later postfire winters. The spatial patt
erning of fire influenced ungulate survival if fires covered small to
moderate proportions of the landscape (e.g., 15% or 30%) and if winter
snow conditions were moderate to severe. Ungulate survival was higher
with a clumped than with a fragmented fire pattern, suggesting that a
single, large fire is not equivalent to a group of smaller disconnect
ed fires. The interaction between fire scale and spatial pattern sugge
sts that knowledge of fire size alone is not always sufficient to pred
ict ungulate survival.