Institute of Wildlife Biology and Game Management, Department of Integrative Biology and Biodiversity Research, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Gregor-Mendel-Str. 33, 1180, Vienna, Austria.
Research Institute of Wildlife Ecology, Department of Interdisciplinary Life Sciences, University of Veterinary Medicine, Savoyenstraße 1, 1160, Vienna, Austria.
Environ Manage. 2024 Dec;74(6):1190-1206. doi: 10.1007/s00267-024-02063-4. Epub 2024 Oct 24.
Ungulate herbivory might induce different effects on the diversity and growth of trees and shrubs. The density, distribution, and the species of ungulates as well as plant communities' composition and other factors determine whether ungulate herbivory promotes or limits plants' diversity and growth. The impacts of ungulates on woody plants are commonly surveyed with exclosure-control approaches. In practice, such surveys frequently only cover short periods of time, addressing immediate management needs. Long-term surveys, documenting lasting effects of ungulate herbivory, are highly needed, but still rare. However, the general transferability of outcomes of long-term surveys might be limited due to different disturbing factors. This study addresses two basic aspects of long-term monitoring in mountainous forests, based on a unique 30-year data set: (1) Possible long-term effects of herbivores on forest vegetation (e.g., species/structural diversity of woody plants) and (2) potential differences between short-term and long-term surveys in terms of height growth patterns. In our study, diversity of woody plant species showed great variability with no significant impact of ungulate herbivory. The presence of ungulates had a significantly negative effect on the vertical structural diversity and growth of trees. Due to the slower growth on control plots, it took trees longer to reach a 160 cm height-threshold with their terminal shoots than on exclosure plots. Our long-term control-exclosure data set indicated that long-term survey data indeed might differ from growth patterns represented by short-term surveys. This can be induced by several factors, like site-specific growth patterns of trees, occurrences of natural abiotic disturbances that influence the functional life of exclosures, and others.
有蹄类食草动物的取食可能会对树木和灌木的多样性和生长产生不同的影响。有蹄类动物的密度、分布和物种,以及植物群落的组成和其他因素,决定了有蹄类动物的取食是促进还是限制植物的多样性和生长。通常采用围栏控制方法来调查有蹄类动物对木本植物的影响。在实践中,此类调查通常只覆盖很短的时间,以满足当前的管理需求。需要进行长期调查,以记录有蹄类动物取食的持久影响,但这种调查仍然很少。然而,由于不同的干扰因素,长期调查结果的普遍可转移性可能受到限制。本研究基于一个独特的 30 年数据集,解决了山区森林中长期监测的两个基本方面:(1)食草动物对森林植被(例如,木本植物的物种/结构多样性)的可能长期影响;(2)短期和长期调查在树木高度生长模式方面的潜在差异。在我们的研究中,木本植物物种的多样性具有很大的可变性,食草动物的存在对树木的垂直结构多样性和生长没有显著影响。有蹄类动物的存在对树木的垂直结构多样性和生长有显著的负面影响。由于对照样地的生长速度较慢,树木达到 160 厘米高的终端树梢所需的时间比围栏样地长。我们的长期控制围栏数据集表明,长期调查数据确实可能与短期调查所代表的生长模式不同。这可能是由几个因素引起的,例如树木的特定地点生长模式、影响围栏功能寿命的自然非生物干扰的发生等。