U.S. Geological Survey Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center, La Crosse, Wisconsin, 54603, USA.
Institute for Applied Ecosystem Studies, Northern Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Rhinelander, Wisconsin, 54501, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2017 Jun;27(4):1317-1337. doi: 10.1002/eap.1526. Epub 2017 Apr 20.
Loss of top predators may contribute to high ungulate population densities and chronic over-browsing of forest ecosystems. However, spatial and temporal variability in the strength of interactions between predators and ungulates occurs over scales that are much shorter than the scales over which forest communities change, making it difficult to characterize trophic cascades in forest ecosystems. We applied the LANDIS-II forest succession model and a recently developed ungulate browsing extension to model how the moose population could interact with the forest ecosystem of Isle Royale National Park, USA, under three different wolf predation scenarios. We contrasted a 100-yr future without wolves (no predation) with two predation scenarios (weak, long-term average predation rates and strong, higher than average rates). Increasing predation rates led to lower peak moose population densities, lower biomass removal rates, and higher estimates of forage availability and landscape carrying capacity, especially during the first 40 yr of simulations. Thereafter, moose population density was similar for all predation scenarios, but available forage biomass and the carrying capacity of the landscape continued to diverge among predation scenarios. Changes in total aboveground live biomass and species composition were most pronounced in the no predation and weak predation scenarios. Consistent with smaller-scale studies, high browsing rates led to reductions in the biomass of heavily browsed Populus tremuloides, Betula papyrifera, and Abies balsamea, and increases in the biomass of unbrowsed Picea glauca and Picea mariana, especially after the simulation year 2050, when existing boreal hardwood stands at Isle Royale are projected to senesce. As a consequence, lower predation rates corresponded with a landscape that progressively shifted toward dominance by Picea glauca and Picea mariana, and lacking available forage biomass. Consistencies with previously documented small-scale successional shifts, and population estimates and trends that approximate those from this and other boreal forests that support moose provide some confidence that these dynamics represent a trophic cascade and therefore provide an important baseline against which to evaluate long-term and large-scale effects of alternative predator management strategies on ungulate populations and forest succession.
顶级捕食者的减少可能导致高数量的有蹄类动物种群密度和对森林生态系统的长期过度啃食。然而,捕食者和有蹄类动物之间相互作用的空间和时间可变性发生在比森林群落变化的规模小得多的尺度上,这使得很难描述森林生态系统中的营养级联。我们应用 LANDIS-II 森林演替模型和最近开发的有蹄类动物啃食扩展模型,来模拟驼鹿种群在美国 Isle Royale 国家公园的森林生态系统中如何与三种不同的狼捕食情景相互作用。我们将没有狼的 100 年未来(无捕食)与两种捕食情景(弱,长期平均捕食率和强,高于平均率)进行了对比。随着捕食率的增加,驼鹿种群密度峰值降低,生物量去除率降低,以及饲料可用性和景观承载能力的估计值升高,尤其是在前 40 年的模拟中。此后,所有捕食情景下的驼鹿种群密度相似,但在捕食情景之间,可用饲料生物量和景观的承载能力继续分化。总地上活体生物量和物种组成的变化在无捕食和弱捕食情景中最为明显。与较小规模的研究一致,高啃食率导致受严重啃食的颤杨、纸皮桦和香脂冷杉的生物量减少,以及未啃食的白云杉和黑云杉的生物量增加,尤其是在模拟年份 2050 之后,当 Isle Royale 现有的北方硬木林预计会衰老时。因此,较低的捕食率对应于一个景观,该景观逐渐由白云杉和黑云杉主导,并且缺乏可用的饲料生物量。与以前记录的小规模演替变化以及与其他支持驼鹿的北方森林的种群估计和趋势相吻合,这些动态代表了一个营养级联,并为评估替代捕食者管理策略对有蹄类动物种群和森林演替的长期和大规模影响提供了一个重要的基线。