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Rapid, landscape scale responses in riparian tundra vegetation to exclusion of small and large mammalian herbivores
Authors:Virve Tuulia Ravolainen  Kari Anne Bråthen  Rolf Anker Ims  Nigel Gilles Yoccoz  John-André Henden  Siw T Killengreen
Institution:Department of Arctic and Marine Biology, University of Tromsø, N-9037 Tromsø, Norway
Abstract:Productive tundra plant communities composed of a variety of fast growing herbaceous and woody plants are likely to attract mammalian herbivores. Such vegetation is likely to respond to different-sized herbivores more rapidly than currently acknowledged from the tundra. Accentuated by currently changing populations of arctic mammals there is a need to understand impacts of different-sized herbivores on the dynamics of productive tundra plant communities. Here we assess the differential effects of ungulate (reindeer) and small rodent herbivores (voles and lemmings) on high productive tundra vegetation. A spatially extensive exclosure experiment was run for three years on river sediment plains along two river catchments in low-arctic Norway. The river catchments were similar in species pools but differed in species abundance composition of both plants and vertebrate herbivores. Biomass of forbs, deciduous shrubs and silica-poor grasses increased by 40–50% in response to release from herbivory, whereas biomass of silica-rich grasses decreased by 50–75%. Hence both additive and compensatory effects of small rodents and reindeer exclusion caused these significant changes in abundance composition of the plant communities. Changes were also rapid, evident after only one growing season, and are among the fastest and strongest ever documented in Arctic vegetation. The rate of changes indicates a tight link between the dynamics of productive tundra vegetation and both small and large herbivores. Responses were however not spatially consistent, being highly different between the catchments. We conclude that despite similar species pools, variation in plant species abundance and herbivore species dynamics give different prerequisites for change.
Keywords:Plant&ndash  herbivore interactions  Community dynamics  Plant growth forms  Rangifer tarandus  Lemmus lemmus  Microtus oeconomus  Deschampsia cespitosa  Varanger Peninsula
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