Abstract

Utilisation of heather at three Scottish moors, by red grouse, mountain hares, sheep and red deer, was measured by collecting their faecal droppings regularly from plots on heather patches of different ages. Rates of heather growth differed between moors, and preferences of the four species, all grazers of heather, were related more closely to its height than to its age. Thus hares spent most time on ground with heather less than 15 cm high, sheep less than 20 cm, grouse preferred heather 10–30 cm high and deer spent most time on heather over 25 cm high.Differences between outer, middle and inner plots on patches at one of the moors in dicated that grouse are reluctant to move far from cover into areas of newly burned ground, and reluctant to move far into patches of tall, dense heather, when these are next to shorter material. Hares preferred the middle of patches on newly burned ground and very young heather.At two of the moors, but not the third, there was evidence that heavy grazing by hares in winter reduced the amount of young heather available to hares and grouse in spring. This potential reduction in the quality of the spring diet of grouse is discussed In relation to previously reported associations between numbers of hares and grouse at those two moors.

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