Moose effects on soil temperatures, tree canopies, and understory vegetation: a path analysis

Abstract Large vertebrate herbivores are ubiquitous and increasingly numerous in boreal forests where they are known to influence ecosystems in many ways. However, separating the direct effects of herbivores from their indirect effects on plant communities via forest structural changes and microclim...

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Main Authors: Anders Lorentzen Kolstad, Gunnar Austrheim, Bente J. Graae, Erling J. Solberg, G. Richard Strimbeck, James D. M. Speed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-12-01
Series:Ecosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2966
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spelling doaj-bbbf82cc23de4a92badd07269056898a2020-11-25T01:40:31ZengWileyEcosphere2150-89252019-12-011012n/an/a10.1002/ecs2.2966Moose effects on soil temperatures, tree canopies, and understory vegetation: a path analysisAnders Lorentzen Kolstad0Gunnar Austrheim1Bente J. Graae2Erling J. Solberg3G. Richard Strimbeck4James D. M. Speed5Department of Natural History NTNU University Museum Norwegian University of Science and Technology NO‐7491 Trondheim NorwayDepartment of Natural History NTNU University Museum Norwegian University of Science and Technology NO‐7491 Trondheim NorwayDepartment of Biology Norwegian University of Science and Technology NO‐7034 Trondheim NorwayNorwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA) NO‐7485 Trondheim NorwayDepartment of Biology Norwegian University of Science and Technology NO‐7034 Trondheim NorwayDepartment of Natural History NTNU University Museum Norwegian University of Science and Technology NO‐7491 Trondheim NorwayAbstract Large vertebrate herbivores are ubiquitous and increasingly numerous in boreal forests where they are known to influence ecosystems in many ways. However, separating the direct effects of herbivores from their indirect effects on plant communities via forest structural changes and microclimate remains unexplored, limiting the predictability of herbivore impacts. We used an exploratory path analysis approach to investigate potential mechanistic pathways between herbivore removal, forest canopy cover, soil temperature, and understory vegetation dynamics. Moose (Alces alces) were excluded from 15 recently clear‐cut boreal forest sites in Norway using 20 × 20 m fences with paired open un‐fenced plots. Soil temperatures and vegetation data were recorded after eight years (total n = 98). Moose exclusion reduced summer soil temperatures but not winter soil temperatures, leading to no net effect over 344 d. Path analysis showed a strong positive effect of moose exclusion on canopy cover and subsequently reduced summer soil temperatures. There was some support for an increase in the dominant grass species Avenella flexuosa with increasing summer soil temperatures, but neither temperature, canopy cover, nor A. flexuosa had clear links to plant species densities. Moose exclusion directly increased herb biomass and shifted understory species composition toward less shrub‐dominated communities, resulting in increased species densities of vascular plants and bryophytes. Our results indicate that in early‐successional boreal forests, direct effects of large herbivores on plant communities are clearly visible, and indirect effects are detectable but much weaker.https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2966Alces alcesAvenella flexuosadiversityEuropean elkmicroclimatemoose
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anders Lorentzen Kolstad
Gunnar Austrheim
Bente J. Graae
Erling J. Solberg
G. Richard Strimbeck
James D. M. Speed
spellingShingle Anders Lorentzen Kolstad
Gunnar Austrheim
Bente J. Graae
Erling J. Solberg
G. Richard Strimbeck
James D. M. Speed
Moose effects on soil temperatures, tree canopies, and understory vegetation: a path analysis
Ecosphere
Alces alces
Avenella flexuosa
diversity
European elk
microclimate
moose
author_facet Anders Lorentzen Kolstad
Gunnar Austrheim
Bente J. Graae
Erling J. Solberg
G. Richard Strimbeck
James D. M. Speed
author_sort Anders Lorentzen Kolstad
title Moose effects on soil temperatures, tree canopies, and understory vegetation: a path analysis
title_short Moose effects on soil temperatures, tree canopies, and understory vegetation: a path analysis
title_full Moose effects on soil temperatures, tree canopies, and understory vegetation: a path analysis
title_fullStr Moose effects on soil temperatures, tree canopies, and understory vegetation: a path analysis
title_full_unstemmed Moose effects on soil temperatures, tree canopies, and understory vegetation: a path analysis
title_sort moose effects on soil temperatures, tree canopies, and understory vegetation: a path analysis
publisher Wiley
series Ecosphere
issn 2150-8925
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Abstract Large vertebrate herbivores are ubiquitous and increasingly numerous in boreal forests where they are known to influence ecosystems in many ways. However, separating the direct effects of herbivores from their indirect effects on plant communities via forest structural changes and microclimate remains unexplored, limiting the predictability of herbivore impacts. We used an exploratory path analysis approach to investigate potential mechanistic pathways between herbivore removal, forest canopy cover, soil temperature, and understory vegetation dynamics. Moose (Alces alces) were excluded from 15 recently clear‐cut boreal forest sites in Norway using 20 × 20 m fences with paired open un‐fenced plots. Soil temperatures and vegetation data were recorded after eight years (total n = 98). Moose exclusion reduced summer soil temperatures but not winter soil temperatures, leading to no net effect over 344 d. Path analysis showed a strong positive effect of moose exclusion on canopy cover and subsequently reduced summer soil temperatures. There was some support for an increase in the dominant grass species Avenella flexuosa with increasing summer soil temperatures, but neither temperature, canopy cover, nor A. flexuosa had clear links to plant species densities. Moose exclusion directly increased herb biomass and shifted understory species composition toward less shrub‐dominated communities, resulting in increased species densities of vascular plants and bryophytes. Our results indicate that in early‐successional boreal forests, direct effects of large herbivores on plant communities are clearly visible, and indirect effects are detectable but much weaker.
topic Alces alces
Avenella flexuosa
diversity
European elk
microclimate
moose
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2966
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