Orndahl Kathleen M, Bentzen Torsten W, Berner Logan T, Ehlers Libby P W, Hebblewhite Mark, Herriges Jim D, Joly Kyle, Macander Matthew J, Palm Eric C, Suitor Michael J, Goetz Scott J
School of Informatics, Computing and Cyber Systems, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, Arizona, USA.
Alaska Department of Fish & Game, Fairbanks, Alaska, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2025 Jun;35(4):e70038. doi: 10.1002/eap.70038.
Rapid climate warming has contributed to significant changes in Arctic and boreal vegetation over the past half century. Changes in vegetation can impact wildlife by altering habitat and forage availability, which can affect behavior and range use. However, animals can also influence vegetation through foraging and trampling and therefore play an important role in determining ecosystem responses to climate change. As wildlife populations grow, density-dependent processes can prompt range expansion or shifts. One mechanism for this is density-dependent forage reduction, which can contribute to nutritional stress and population declines, and can also alter vegetation change trajectories. We assessed the range characteristics of a migratory caribou (Rangifer tarandus) herd in east-central Alaska and west-central Yukon Territory as it grew (1992-2017) then declined (2017-2020). Furthermore, we analyzed the correlation between caribou relative spatial density and vegetation change over this period using remotely sensed models of plant functional type cover. Over this period, caribou population density increased in all seasonal ranges. This was most acute in the calving range where density increased 8-fold, from 1.5 to 12.0 animals km. Concurrent with increasing density, we documented range shifts and expansion across summer, post-calving and winter ranges. In particular, summer range size doubled (12,000 km increase) and overlap with core range (areas with repeated year-round use) was halved. Meanwhile, lichen cover, a key forage item, declined more in areas with high caribou density (2.4% absolute, 22% relative decline in cover) compared to areas where caribou were mostly absent (0.3% absolute, 1.9% relative decline). Conversely, deciduous shrub cover increased more in high caribou density areas. However, increases were dominated by less palatable shrubs whereas more palatable shrubs (i.e., willow [Salix spp.]) were stable or declined slightly. These changes in vegetation cover were small relative to uncertainty in the map products used to calculate change. Nonetheless, correlations between vegetation change and caribou range characteristics, along with concerning demographic trends reported over this same period, suggest changing forage conditions may have played a role in the herd's subsequent population decline. Our research highlights the potential of remotely sensed metrics of vegetation change for assessing the impacts of herbivory and trampling and stresses the importance of in situ data such as exclosures for validating such findings.
在过去的半个世纪里,气候迅速变暖导致北极和北方地区的植被发生了显著变化。植被变化会通过改变栖息地和可获取的食物,进而影响野生动物,这可能会影响其行为和活动范围。然而,动物也会通过觅食和践踏影响植被,因此在决定生态系统对气候变化的反应方面发挥着重要作用。随着野生动物数量的增加,密度依赖过程会促使其活动范围扩大或发生转移。其中一种机制是密度依赖的食物减少,这可能导致营养压力和种群数量下降,还可能改变植被变化轨迹。我们评估了阿拉斯加中东部和育空地区中西部一个迁徙驯鹿群(Rangifer tarandus)在其数量增长期(1992 - 2017年)和数量下降期(2017 - 2020年)的活动范围特征。此外,我们使用植物功能类型覆盖度的遥感模型分析了这一时期驯鹿相对空间密度与植被变化之间的相关性。在这一时期,驯鹿在所有季节性活动范围内的种群密度都有所增加。这在产仔范围内最为明显,密度增加了8倍,从每平方公里1.5只增加到12.0只。随着密度的增加,我们记录到其在夏季、产仔后和冬季活动范围的转移和扩大。特别是,夏季活动范围面积翻倍(增加了12000平方公里),与核心活动范围(全年反复使用的区域)的重叠减少了一半。与此同时,作为关键食物来源的地衣覆盖度,在驯鹿密度高的地区下降幅度更大(绝对下降2.4%,覆盖度相对下降22%),相比之下,驯鹿基本不存在的地区下降幅度较小(绝对下降0.3%,覆盖度相对下降1.9%)。相反,落叶灌木覆盖度在驯鹿密度高的地区增加得更多。然而,增加的主要是适口性较差的灌木,而适口性较好的灌木(如柳树[Salix spp.])则保持稳定或略有下降。相对于用于计算变化的地图产品中的不确定性而言,植被覆盖度的这些变化较小。尽管如此,植被变化与驯鹿活动范围特征之间的相关性,以及同期报告的令人担忧的种群趋势表明,不断变化的食物条件可能在该鹿群随后的种群数量下降中起到了作用。我们的研究强调了利用植被变化的遥感指标评估食草和践踏影响的潜力,并强调了诸如围栏等实地数据对验证此类发现的重要性。