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Rapid recovery of recently overexploited winter grazing pastures for reindeer in northern Norway
Authors:Hans Tømmervik  Jarle W Bjerke  Eldar Gaare  Bernt Johansen  Dietbert Thannheiser
Institution:1. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA), FRAM – High North Research Centre on Climate and the Environment, NO-9296 Tromsø, Norway;2. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA), NO-7485 Trondheim, Norway;3. Northern Research Institute (Norut), NO-9294 Tromsø, Norway;4. Institut für Geographie, University of Hamburg, D-20146 Hamburg, Germany
Abstract:During the last 25 yr, Sami reindeer husbandry in parts of Finnmarksvidda in the Norwegian Arctic has been in a critical state because of overexploitation of lichen-dominated tundra, which serves as winter forage. To better understand the ecosystem’s capabilities for recovery we investigated vegetation cover changes over a 7-yr period, starting in 1998, at 52 sites dispersed over a large area at Finnmarksvidda. Two types of plots were established: one fenced from reindeer grazing and trampling and one open for reindeer. The investigations in 2005 showed that lichen cover had had a significant and rapid increase (up to 8.6-fold per year). The cover of vascular plants, mainly dwarf shrubs, also increased significantly, while barren areas and the cover of litter decreased significantly during the period. Mean relative growth rate of lichen biomass was 0.083 ± 0.011 per year in open plots, which is considered very rapid recovery compared to previous studies. Lichen recovery was significantly faster on leeward ridges than on exposed ridges, and fencing alone did not have any significant effects on lichen recovery, but in interaction with time, fencing contributed to increasing recovery rates. The lichen heath recovery was reciprocally correlated with reindeer density. In addition, lichen recovery was probably facilitated by recent climate changes, viz. shallower snow depths which made leeward tundra and forest floor vegetation accessible for reindeer, and increased summer precipitation rates which improved growth rates. The results from this study show that in a very short time there was a transition from an overexploited depauperate vegetation and barren ground state to a flourishing lichen-dominated vegetation state, suggesting that the injuries were repairable. The vegetation transitions which have taken place in the study area are considered to be reversible with fewer persistent effects.
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