4.5 Article

Reflections of ecological differences? Stress responses of sympatric Alpine chamois and red deer to weather, forage quality, and human disturbance

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 11, Issue 22, Pages 15740-15753

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8235

Keywords

Cervus elaphus; fecal cortisol metabolites; fecal nitrogen; Rupicapra rupicapra; snow height; Swiss National Park

Funding

  1. Swiss National Park

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Based on fecal samples from 742 chamois and 1557 red deer collected over four years in the Swiss Alps, the study found that both species showed a stress response to drought conditions in summer, and an increase in stress response with snow height in winter. However, red deer's response to snow height was modulated by temperature, while chamois showed a stronger stress response in November and December compared to January and March.
Depending on the habitats they live in, temperate ungulates have adapted to different degrees to seasonally changing forage and weather conditions, and to specific escape strategies from predators. Alpine chamois, a mountain ungulate, and red deer, originally adapted to open plains, would therefore be expected to differ in their physiological responses to potential stressors. Based on 742 chamois and 1557 red deer fecal samples collected year-round every 2 weeks for 4 years at the same locations within a strictly protected area in the Swiss Alps, we analyzed glucocorticoid metabolite (FGM) concentrations for both species. Results from linear mixed effects models revealed no physiological stress response to changing visitor numbers, but instead to drought conditions for both species during summer. In winter, FGM concentrations increased with increasing snow height in both species, but this response was modulated by temperature in red deer. Chamois showed a stronger stress response to increasing snow height during November and December than between January and March, while FGM concentrations increased with decreasing temperature throughout winter. An increase in FGM concentrations with decreasing forage digestibility during winter was found only for red deer. The results are thus partly in contradiction to expectations based on feeding type and adaptations to different habitats between the two species. The lack of a response to forage digestibility in chamois may reflect either better adaptation to difficult feeding conditions in subalpine forests, or, by contrast, strong constraints imposed by forage quality. The similar responses of both species to weather conditions in winter suggest that climatic factors at the elevations examined here are sufficiently harsh to be limiting to temperate ungulates regardless of their specific adaptations to this environment.

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