Painter Luke E, Beschta Robert L, Ripple William J
Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Sciences Oregon State University Corvallis Oregon USA.
Department of Forest Ecosystems and Society Oregon State University Corvallis Oregon USA.
Ecol Evol. 2023 Aug 29;13(8):e10369. doi: 10.1002/ece3.10369. eCollection 2023 Aug.
The American bison () is a species that strongly interacts with its environment, yet the effects of this large herbivore on quaking aspen () have received little study. We documented bison breaking the stems of aspen saplings (young aspen >2 m tall and ≤5 cm in diameter at breast height) and examined the extent of this effect in northern Yellowstone National Park (YNP). Low densities of Rocky Mountain elk () after about 2004 created conditions conducive for new aspen recruitment in YNP's northern ungulate winter range (northern range). We sampled aspen saplings at local and landscape scales, using random sampling plots in 87 randomly selected aspen stands. Across the YNP northern range, we found that 18% of sapling stems had been broken. The causal attribution to bison was supported by multiple lines of evidence: (1) most broken saplings were in areas of high bison and low elk density; (2) saplings were broken in summer when elk were not foraging on them; (3) we directly observed bison breaking aspen saplings; and (4) mixed-effects modeling showed a positive association between scat density of bison and the proportion of saplings broken. In a stand heavily used by bison, most aspen saplings had been broken, and portions of the stand were cleared of saplings that were present in previous sampling in 2012. Bison numbers increased more than fourfold between 2004 and 2015, and their ecosystem effects have similarly increased, limiting and in some places reversing the nascent aspen recovery. This situation is further complicated by political constraints that prevent bison from dispersing to areas outside the park. Thus, one important conservation goal, the preservation of bison, is affecting another long-term conservation goal, the recovery of aspen and other deciduous woody species in northern Yellowstone.
美洲野牛()是一种与环境密切相互作用的物种,然而这种大型食草动物对颤杨()的影响却鲜有研究。我们记录了野牛折断山杨树苗(胸径大于2米且小于等于5厘米的幼龄山杨)的情况,并在黄石国家公园(YNP)北部考察了这种影响的程度。2004年左右落基山麋鹿()密度降低,为YNP北部有蹄类动物冬季活动区(北部活动区)新的山杨幼苗生长创造了有利条件。我们在当地和景观尺度上对山杨树苗进行采样,在87个随机选取的山杨林中使用随机抽样地块。在YNP北部活动区,我们发现18%的树苗茎干被折断。多条证据支持了野牛是造成这种情况的原因:(1)大多数被折断的树苗位于野牛密度高而麋鹿密度低的区域;(2)树苗在夏季被折断,此时麋鹿并不以它们为食;(3)我们直接观察到野牛折断山杨树苗;(4)混合效应模型显示野牛粪便密度与树苗折断比例之间存在正相关。在一个野牛大量活动的林分中,大多数山杨树苗都被折断了,并且该林分的部分区域清除了2012年上次采样时存在的树苗。2004年至2015年间,野牛数量增加了四倍多,它们对生态系统的影响也相应增加,限制了山杨的新生恢复,在某些地方甚至使其逆转。由于政治限制,野牛无法扩散到公园外的地区,这种情况更加复杂。因此,一个重要的保护目标,即保护野牛,正在影响另一个长期保护目标,即黄石北部山杨和其他落叶木本物种的恢复。