4.5 Article

Functional traits of alpine plant communities show long-term resistance to changing herbivore densities

期刊

ECOSPHERE
卷 12, 期 12, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.3887

关键词

alpine; climate changes; elevation; grazing; herbivory; legacy effects; plant functional traits; sheep; stability

类别

资金

  1. Research Council of Norway [262064, 244525]
  2. internal University of Bergen fund Olaf Grolle Olsens Legat til Universitetet i Bergen, med tilforsel av arv etter Miranda Brodtker
  3. Hordaland fylkeskommune

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Herbivores shape vegetation by affecting plant species composition, leading to impacts on carbon cycling, albedo, vegetation structure, and species' interactions. Managing large herbivores in alpine environments could mitigate climate change effects, although past grazing legacy effects may dampen their impact. Long-term sheep grazing history may influence plant trait composition, while short-term changes in sheep densities may not have immediate effects on plant communities in the context of ecosystem management.
Herbivores shape vegetation by suppressing certain plant species while benefitting others. By thus modifying plant species functional composition, herbivores affect carbon cycling, albedo, vegetation structure and species' interactions. These effects have been suggested to be able to counteract the effects of increasing temperatures on vegetation in alpine environments. Managing the dominant large ungulates in these ecosystems could thus provide a tool to mitigate climate change effects. However, it is possible that legacy effects of past grazing will dampen ungulate impacts on vegetation. We shed a light on this topic by investigating the short- and long-term effects of varying sheep densities on the plant trait composition in the Norwegian alpine tundra with centuries-long of intensive grazing history. In the first part of our study, we quantified the effects of sheep on the plant community functional trait composition at different elevations and under moderate and low productivity in. We combined data from two long-term (14 and 19 yr) sheep fence experiments and showed that differences in sheep densities did not affect plant trait composition, irrespective of productivity. However, in the second part of our study, we showed that the plant trait composition in mainland (that has been grazed for centuries) differed from vegetation on islands which have been herbivore-free. Taken together, these results suggest that sheep have an effect on the alpine plant communities on historical time scales covering centuries, but that the resulting sheep grazing resistant/tolerant communities may not respond to shorter-term (14 and 19 yr) changes in sheep densities, that is, at temporal scales relevant for ecosystem management. Furthermore, we showed that the plant trait composition at the site with low productivity had gone through a temporal trait change independent of sheep treatment, potentially due to increased temperatures and precipitation, suggesting that sheep may not be able to counteract climatic impacts in the areas with centuries-long grazing history.

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