Christianson David, Creel Scott
Department of Ecology, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana 59717, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2009 Jul;19(5):1323-35. doi: 10.1890/08-0987.1.
Spatiotemporal variation in primary productivity is known to have strong and far-reaching effects on herbivore ecology, but this relationship is often studied indirectly at broad scales, in part due to the difficulty in measuring selection for green biomass by individual animals. In aquatic systems, the concentration of chlorophyll in herbivore feces has been used as a direct measure of the consumption of photosynthetic primary production, but this method has not been applied to terrestrial systems. We measured chlorophyll concentration in feces from elk (Cervus elaphus) experiencing large fluctuations in primary production in the winter to spring transition over three years. We compared temporal trends in fecal chlorophyll with trends in fecal nitrogen, grass chlorophyll, grass digestible nitrogen, and landscape-level primary productivity (as described by the normalized difference vegetation index or NDVI). We also directly examined the relationship between fecal chlorophyll and NDVI. Temporal trends in fecal chlorophyll were strong and well described by piecewise regression (adjusted coefficient of determination, r(2)a = 0.881-0.888), showing uniformly low concentrations throughout winter followed by an abrupt, rapid increase beginning on different Julian days (88, 91, or 110) each year. Changes in fecal chlorophyll closely matched the temporal trend in the chlorophyll and digestible nitrogen concentration of forage grasses collected directly from elk feeding sites. Fecal chlorophyll also tracked broad temporal patterns in fecal nitrogen and NDVI, but discrepancies between the indexes may highlight preferences or constraints on selectivity for green biomass in elk. Spatially and temporally matched NDVI and fecal chlorophyll estimates were uncorrelated until NDVI reached approximately half its seasonal range. Combined, these data describe important patterns in selection for nutritious, green biomass in a temperate herbivore that would be difficult to study without data on fecal chlorophyll. Fecal chlorophyll produced novel and precise descriptions of (and detected large interannual differences in) winter length, severity, and the rate of spring green-up, as they were experienced by a large, grazing herbivore. Measuring fecal chlorophyll provides a noninvasive, inexpensive, and direct approach to describe an important aspect of foraging ecology in terrestrial herbivores and may be particularly powerful for studying climate effects in seasonal environments.
初级生产力的时空变化对食草动物生态学具有强烈且深远的影响,这是已知的,但这种关系通常在大尺度上进行间接研究,部分原因是难以衡量个体动物对绿色生物量的选择。在水生系统中,食草动物粪便中的叶绿素浓度已被用作光合作用初级生产消耗量的直接指标,但该方法尚未应用于陆地系统。我们测量了三年间冬季到春季过渡期间初级生产大幅波动的麋鹿(Cervus elaphus)粪便中的叶绿素浓度。我们将粪便叶绿素的时间趋势与粪便氮、草叶绿素、草可消化氮以及景观水平初级生产力(由归一化植被指数或NDVI描述)的趋势进行了比较。我们还直接研究了粪便叶绿素与NDVI之间的关系。粪便叶绿素的时间趋势很强,通过分段回归能很好地描述(调整后的决定系数,r(2)a = 0.881 - 0.888),表明整个冬季浓度一直很低,随后在每年不同的儒略日(88、91或110)开始突然迅速增加。粪便叶绿素的变化与直接从麋鹿觅食地采集的牧草叶绿素和可消化氮浓度的时间趋势密切匹配。粪便叶绿素也跟踪了粪便氮和NDVI的广泛时间模式,但这些指标之间的差异可能突出了麋鹿对绿色生物量选择性的偏好或限制。在NDVI达到其季节性范围的大约一半之前,空间和时间匹配的NDVI和粪便叶绿素估计值不相关。综合来看,这些数据描述了温带食草动物对营养丰富的绿色生物量选择的重要模式,没有粪便叶绿素数据很难进行研究。粪便叶绿素对大型食草动物所经历的冬季长度、严重程度和春季返青率给出了新颖而精确的描述(并检测到较大的年际差异)。测量粪便叶绿素提供了一种非侵入性、廉价且直接的方法来描述陆地食草动物觅食生态学的一个重要方面,对于研究季节性环境中的气候影响可能特别有效。