Abstract

Two independent models concerning the effects of grazing on vegetation have gained wide acceptance in the last decade: Westoby et al.'s state‐and‐transition (S– T) model, and Milchunas et al.'s generalized model of the effects of grazing on plant community structure and diversity (MSL model). These two prevailing models, as they stand, are conceptually divergent. The MSL model implicitly assumes that, at a given site, for each grazing intensity there is a single equilibrium situation with a single diversity value. The S–T model suggests that rangeland dynamics include irreversible transitions and alternative equilibria. Here we propose a modification of the original MSL model, to encompass a wider range of real situations and to place it within the context of the S–T model. The four extreme cases proposed in the original MSL model are revisited, taking into account that (1) the “moisture” gradient can be generalized as a “productivity” gradient; (2) the selective pressure of herbivores on systems with long history of grazing has fluctuated over time, allowing the development of different pools of species adapted to low or high grazing intensities; and (3) systems with long evolutionary history of grazing have developed resilience mechanisms that allow reversible shifts in floristic composition with changes in grazing intensities. The grazing intensity vs. diversity curves thus postulated for systems with a long evolutionary history of grazing are similar to those proposed by the original MSL model because resilience mechanisms allow for reversible changes associated with grazing intensity. In contrast, the curves postulated for systems with short evolutionary history of grazing include different alternative branches, indicating irreversible transitions, because resilience mechanisms to grazing were not fully developed. By incorporating these modifications, the divergence between the original MSL and S–T models can be resolved. A set of published examples from real systems is presented and compared with the predictions of the modified model. The modified MSL model is applicable to a wider range of real situations than the MSL model in its original formulation.

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