Climate change and anthropogenic food manipulation interact in shifting the distribution of a large herbivore at its altitudinal range limit
Abstract Ungulates in alpine ecosystems are constrained by winter harshness through resource limitation and direct mortality from weather extremes. However, little empirical evidence has definitively established how current climate change and other anthropogenic modifications of resource availabilit...
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doaj-01b8601278744737962d4809d416c9fa2021-04-11T11:31:58ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-04-0111111210.1038/s41598-021-86720-2Climate change and anthropogenic food manipulation interact in shifting the distribution of a large herbivore at its altitudinal range limitJulius G. Bright Ross0Wibke Peters1Federico Ossi2Paul R. Moorcroft3Emanuele Cordano4Emanuele Eccel5Filippo Bianchini6Maurizio Ramanzin7Francesca Cagnacci8Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard UniversityDepartment of Biodiversity, Conservation and Wildlife Management, Bavarian State Institute of ForestryDepartment of Biodiversity and Molecular Ecology, Research and Innovation Centre, Fondazione Edmund MachDepartment of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard UniversityRendena100, Engineering and Consultancy sole proprietorshipDepartment of Sustainable Agro-Ecosystems and Bioresources, Research and Innovation Centre, Fondazione Edmund MachDepartment of Biodiversity and Molecular Ecology, Research and Innovation Centre, Fondazione Edmund MachDepartment of Agronomy, Food, Natural resources, Animals and Environment, University of PadovaDepartment of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard UniversityAbstract Ungulates in alpine ecosystems are constrained by winter harshness through resource limitation and direct mortality from weather extremes. However, little empirical evidence has definitively established how current climate change and other anthropogenic modifications of resource availability affect ungulate winter distribution, especially at their range limits. Here, we used a combination of historical (1997–2002) and contemporary (2012–2015) Eurasian roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) relocation datasets that span changes in snowpack characteristics and two levels of supplemental feeding to compare and forecast probability of space use at the species’ altitudinal range limit. Scarcer snow cover in the contemporary period interacted with the augmented feeding site distribution to increase the elevation of winter range limits, and we predict this trend will continue under climate change. Moreover, roe deer have shifted from historically using feeding sites primarily under deep snow conditions to contemporarily using them under a wider range of snow conditions as their availability has increased. Combined with scarcer snow cover during December, January, and April, this trend has reduced inter-annual variability in space use patterns in these months. These spatial responses to climate- and artificial resource-provisioning shifts evidence the importance of these changing factors in shaping large herbivore spatial distribution and, consequently, ecosystem dynamics.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-86720-2 |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Julius G. Bright Ross Wibke Peters Federico Ossi Paul R. Moorcroft Emanuele Cordano Emanuele Eccel Filippo Bianchini Maurizio Ramanzin Francesca Cagnacci |
spellingShingle |
Julius G. Bright Ross Wibke Peters Federico Ossi Paul R. Moorcroft Emanuele Cordano Emanuele Eccel Filippo Bianchini Maurizio Ramanzin Francesca Cagnacci Climate change and anthropogenic food manipulation interact in shifting the distribution of a large herbivore at its altitudinal range limit Scientific Reports |
author_facet |
Julius G. Bright Ross Wibke Peters Federico Ossi Paul R. Moorcroft Emanuele Cordano Emanuele Eccel Filippo Bianchini Maurizio Ramanzin Francesca Cagnacci |
author_sort |
Julius G. Bright Ross |
title |
Climate change and anthropogenic food manipulation interact in shifting the distribution of a large herbivore at its altitudinal range limit |
title_short |
Climate change and anthropogenic food manipulation interact in shifting the distribution of a large herbivore at its altitudinal range limit |
title_full |
Climate change and anthropogenic food manipulation interact in shifting the distribution of a large herbivore at its altitudinal range limit |
title_fullStr |
Climate change and anthropogenic food manipulation interact in shifting the distribution of a large herbivore at its altitudinal range limit |
title_full_unstemmed |
Climate change and anthropogenic food manipulation interact in shifting the distribution of a large herbivore at its altitudinal range limit |
title_sort |
climate change and anthropogenic food manipulation interact in shifting the distribution of a large herbivore at its altitudinal range limit |
publisher |
Nature Publishing Group |
series |
Scientific Reports |
issn |
2045-2322 |
publishDate |
2021-04-01 |
description |
Abstract Ungulates in alpine ecosystems are constrained by winter harshness through resource limitation and direct mortality from weather extremes. However, little empirical evidence has definitively established how current climate change and other anthropogenic modifications of resource availability affect ungulate winter distribution, especially at their range limits. Here, we used a combination of historical (1997–2002) and contemporary (2012–2015) Eurasian roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) relocation datasets that span changes in snowpack characteristics and two levels of supplemental feeding to compare and forecast probability of space use at the species’ altitudinal range limit. Scarcer snow cover in the contemporary period interacted with the augmented feeding site distribution to increase the elevation of winter range limits, and we predict this trend will continue under climate change. Moreover, roe deer have shifted from historically using feeding sites primarily under deep snow conditions to contemporarily using them under a wider range of snow conditions as their availability has increased. Combined with scarcer snow cover during December, January, and April, this trend has reduced inter-annual variability in space use patterns in these months. These spatial responses to climate- and artificial resource-provisioning shifts evidence the importance of these changing factors in shaping large herbivore spatial distribution and, consequently, ecosystem dynamics. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-86720-2 |
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