Ecosystem drivers of an Arctic fox population at the western fringe of the Eurasian Arctic
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/12177Dato
2017-08-16Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Ims, Rolf Anker; Killengreen, Siw Turid; Ehrich, Dorothee; Flagstad, Øystein; Hamel, Sandra; Henden, John-André; Jensvoll, Ingrid; Yoccoz, Nigel GillesSammendrag
The distribution of traditional breeding dens on the Varanger Peninsula (70–71°N) in northernmost
Fennoscandia indicates that this area once harboured a large Arctic fox population.
Early 20th century naturalists regarded the coastal tundra of the Fennoscandian Low Arctic to
be a stronghold for the species. At the start of our research in 2004, however, the local Arctic
fox population was critically small and most neighbouring populations had been extirpated.
Here, we synthesize the results of 11 years of research to highlight ecosystem drivers behind
the critical state of the Arctic fox in Low-Arctic Fennoscandia. We identify two fundamental
drivers: (1) an increasingly climate-driven irregularity of the lemming cycle and (2) a management-
and climate-driven increase in the abundance of red fox that is subsidized by more
ungulate carrion. Arctic fox reproductive success is low when lemmings are scarce (despite
high vole abundance), while red foxes exclude Arctic foxes from high-quality breeding
territories in summer and from marine and terrestrial carrion in winter. Red fox culling on
Varanger Peninsula may have prevented the extirpation of the Arctic fox population.
However, one decade after the onset of this management action the Arctic fox population
has failed to increase either because the action has been insufficient or because demographic
and environmental stochasticity has precluded a positive response. We discuss options for
future research and management of the Arctic fox in the Fennoscandian Low Arctic.