Department of Natural Sciences, Program on the Environment, University of Alaska Southeast, Juneau, AK, 99801, USA.
Department of Geography, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC, V8W 2Y2, Canada.
Commun Biol. 2024 Apr 29;7(1):423. doi: 10.1038/s42003-024-06073-0.
Snow is a major, climate-sensitive feature of the Earth's surface and catalyst of fundamentally important ecosystem processes. Understanding how snow influences sentinel species in rapidly changing mountain ecosystems is particularly critical. Whereas effects of snow on food availability, energy expenditure, and predation are well documented, we report how avalanches exert major impacts on an ecologically significant mountain ungulate - the coastal Alaskan mountain goat (Oreamnos americanus). Using long-term GPS data and field observations across four populations (421 individuals over 17 years), we show that avalanches caused 23-65% of all mortality, depending on area. Deaths varied seasonally and were directly linked to spatial movement patterns and avalanche terrain use. Population-level avalanche mortality, 61% of which comprised reproductively important prime-aged individuals, averaged 8% annually and exceeded 22% when avalanche conditions were severe. Our findings reveal a widespread but previously undescribed pathway by which snow can elicit major population-level impacts and shape demographic characteristics of slow-growing populations of mountain-adapted animals.
雪是地球表面的一个主要的、对气候敏感的特征,也是对基本生态系统过程具有催化作用的因素。了解雪对快速变化的山地生态系统中“指示物种”的影响尤为关键。虽然雪对食物供应、能量消耗和捕食的影响已有充分的记录,但我们报告了雪崩如何对具有生态意义的山地有蹄类动物——沿海阿拉斯加山羊(Oreamnos americanus)产生重大影响。我们使用长期 GPS 数据和四个种群(17 年间 421 个个体)的实地观察,表明雪崩导致的死亡率占比因地区而异,范围在 23%-65%。死亡情况随季节而变化,与空间移动模式和雪崩地形利用直接相关。种群层面的雪崩死亡率为 61%,其中包括繁殖期重要的适龄个体,年均为 8%,在雪崩条件严重时超过 22%。我们的研究结果揭示了一种广泛存在但以前未被描述的途径,即雪可以引发重大的种群层面影响,并塑造适应山地的生长缓慢的动物种群的人口特征。