Svalbard reindeer winter diets: Long-term dietary shifts to graminoids in response to a changing climate
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27287Dato
2022-09-07Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Hiltunen, Tamara A.; Stien, Audun; Väisänen, Maria; Ropstad, Erik; Aspi, Jouni O.; Welker, Jeffery M.Sammendrag
Arctic ecosystems are changing dramatically with warmer and wetter conditions resulting in complex interactions between herbivores and their forage. We investigated
how Svalbard reindeer (Rangifer tarandus platyrhynchus) modify their late winter diets
in response to long-term trends and interannual variation in forage availability and
accessibility. By reconstructing their diets and foraging niches over a 17-year period
(1995–2012) using serum δ13C and δ15N values, we found strong support for a temporal increase in the proportions of graminoids in the diets with a concurrent decline
in the contributions of mosses. This dietary shift corresponds with graminoid abundance increases in the region and was associated with increases in population density,
warmer summer temperatures and more frequent rain-on-snow (ROS) in winter. In addition, the variance in isotopic niche positions, breadths, and overlaps also supported
a temporal shift in the foraging niche and a dietary response to extreme ROS events.
Our long-term study highlights the mechanisms by which winter and summer climate
changes cascade through vegetation shifts and herbivore population dynamics to alter
the foraging niche of Svalbard reindeer. Although it has been anticipated that climate
changes in the Svalbard region of the Arctic would be detrimental to this unique ungulate, our study suggests that environmental change is in a phase where conditions are
improving for this subspecies at the northernmost edge of the Rangifer distribution.
Forlag
WileySitering
Hiltunen, Stien, Väisänen, Ropstad, Aspi, Welker. Svalbard reindeer winter diets: Long-term dietary shifts to graminoids in response to a changing climate. Global Change Biology. 2022;28(23):7009-7022Metadata
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