University of Rennes, CNRS, ECOBIO [Ecosystèmes, biodiversité, évolution] - UMR 6553, Rennes, France.
INRAE Val de Loire, Research Unit Forest Ecosystems, Domaine des Barres, 45290, Nogent-sur-Vernisson, France.
Ann Bot. 2021 Aug 26;128(3):371-381. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcab079.
The role of deer (family Cervidae) in ecosystem functioning has traditionally been neglected by forest ecologists due to the animal's scarcity in most parts of the northern hemisphere. However, the dramatic rebound in deer populations throughout the 20th century has brought deer browsing to the forefront of forest ecological questioning. Today there is ample evidence that deer affect tree regeneration, understorey plant and animal diversity, and even litter decomposition. However, the mechanisms underlying the effects of deer on forest ecosystems remain unclear. Among others, the relative role of abiotic factors versus biotic interactions (e.g. herbivory) in shaping plant assemblages remains largely unknown.
We used a large-scale experiment with exclosures distributed along abiotic gradients to understand the role of black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus sitchensis) on the forest understorey on the Haida Gwaii archipelago (western Canada), a unique context where most of the key ecological effects of deer presence have already been intensively studied.
Our results demonstrate that 20 years of deer exclusion resulted in a clear increase in vascular plant richness, diversity and cover, and caused a decline in bryophyte cover. Exclusion also unveiled abiotic (i.e. soil water availability and fertility) filtering of plant assemblages that would otherwise have been masked by the impact of abundant deer populations. However, deer exclusion did not lead to an increase in beta diversity, probably because some remnant species had a competitive advantage to regrow after decades of over browsing.
We demonstrated that long-term herbivory by deer can be a dominant factor structuring understorey plant communities that overwhelms abiotic factors. However, while exclosures prove useful to assess the overall effects of large herbivores, the results from our studies at broader scales on the Haida Gwaii archipelago suggest that exclosure experiments should be used cautiously when inferring the mechanisms at work.
由于鹿科动物在北半球大部分地区较为稀少,森林生态学家传统上忽视了其在生态系统功能中的作用。然而,20 世纪鹿种群的急剧反弹使得鹿的啃食成为森林生态学家关注的焦点。如今,有充分的证据表明,鹿会影响树木的再生、林下植物和动物的多样性,甚至影响凋落物的分解。然而,鹿对森林生态系统影响的机制仍不清楚。除其他因素外,生物因素(如食草作用)相对于非生物因素在塑造植物组合方面的相对作用在很大程度上仍未知。
我们使用了一个大型的实验,其中设置了沿着非生物梯度分布的围栏,以了解黑尾鹿(Odocoileus hemionus sitchensis)在海达瓜伊群岛(加拿大西部)森林下层植被中的作用,这是一个独特的背景,在这个背景下,鹿存在的大多数关键生态影响已经得到了深入研究。
我们的研究结果表明,20 年的鹿群排除导致了维管束植物丰富度、多样性和覆盖度的明显增加,并导致了苔藓植物覆盖度的下降。排除还揭示了植物组合的非生物(即土壤水分供应和肥力)过滤作用,否则这些作用会被大量鹿群的影响所掩盖。然而,鹿群的排除并没有导致β多样性的增加,这可能是因为一些残留物种在经过几十年的过度啃食后具有竞争优势重新生长。
我们证明,鹿的长期食草作用可能是一个主导因素,它会塑造林下植物群落,而这种作用会压倒非生物因素。然而,尽管围栏实验证明对于评估大型食草动物的总体影响非常有用,但我们在海达瓜伊群岛更广泛规模上的研究结果表明,在推断作用机制时,围栏实验应该谨慎使用。